225 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
225 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
Just Imagine
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Tim lay back on the cool grass in the shade of his favorite tree, a big pine.
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Brilliant white cumulus clouds were billowing overhead, their edges clearly
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defined against the deep blue of the skies above. Tim stared at the sky for a
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few moments then pointed and said to Dan, his best friend, "Look! That cloud
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up there looks like the head of a dragon!"
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"Where," said Dan, following with his eyes the direction in which Tim was
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pointing. "That's not a dragon," he said, "that's a dog."
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"Naw, it's a dragon" said Tim.
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"Look over there," said Dan, pointing to a cloud in a different direction.
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"Looks like one of those old time trains, you know, the kind that runs on coal?
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See the smoke comin' out of the smokestack?"
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Tim looked where Dan was pointing. "You mean an old steam locomotive? Yeah,
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guess it does look a little like one of those," he said.
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"And look up there!" said Dan, pointing almost straight up. Tim looked, and
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they both said at the same time, "Looks like old man Whitney!" The two boys
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began to giggle, then laughed uncontrollably. They were looking at a large
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swell in the cloud directly above them. The swell indeed resembled an old man:
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a face marked by deep prune-like wrinkles and lines, a large bulbous nose, deep
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set eyes beneath a furrowed brow, and huge obtrusive warts. Only in the
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fertile imaginations of Tim and Dan, however, did the cloud look like old man
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Whitney, their crotchety neighbor.
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The boys watched the clouds throughout the hot and muggy afternoon. The
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roiling turbulence within the clouds provided an ample supply of silhouettes,
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shapes, and forms for the boys to imagine as the people and things they knew.
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Rarely had the boys spent such an afternoon: quiet, and staying out of
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mischief and trouble.
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Late in the afternoon the cumulus clouds began to grow larger and darker,
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rising into towering columns of turmoil. The horizon filled with threatening
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cumulo-nimbus clouds, which foretold of the evening thunderstorm to come. Tim
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and Dan could find little to see or imagine in the dark clouds and went in
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search of another pastime, much to the disappointment of old man Whitney.
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The thunderstorm yielded little rain, but the lightning and thunder outplayed
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every show in town. The evening spectacular drew people to windows and porches
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and some, to basements. Tim and Dan stood out in the middle of their back
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yards where they could see and experience it all. Slightly cooler air
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proceeded the storm, providing everyone with much needed relief from the
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oppressive daytime temperatures, if only for a few hours. By morning the storm
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had passed and another day of stifling heat and mugginess was in store.
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Tim and Dan spent the cooler morning hours wandering about the neighborhood
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climbing trees, throwing pine cones, and annoying old man Whitney. Like the
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day before, they spent the hot afternoon lying in the shade, seeing things in
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the clouds. Their imaginations were growing, and they began to see very
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complex and detailed objects in the simplest of clouds.
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The next day, however, clear blue skies replaced the clouds. The mugginess
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abated but the temperature increased to near one hundred degrees. Tim and Dan
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had a pine cone fight that morning, climbed two trees, and checked the progress
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of the building of the new house down on Union street. As the day wore on the
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heat again became stifling and the two boys headed for the shade of their
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favorite tree.
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"There ain't any clouds today," said Tim sadly. He picked a long blade of
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grass and put it in his mouth to suck on, then laid down on his back with his
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hands behind his head.
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Following Tim's lead, Dan picked a blade of grass and laid down beside his
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friend. "What'll we do now?"
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"I don't know," replied Tim. There was silence for a moment, then he said,
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"Remember the cloud the other day that looked like old man Whitney?"
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"Yeah, sure did look like him didn't it?"
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"Yeah, mean and ugly lookin', just like him." The two boys snickered at the
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memory, then lay quietly for several minutes, each with his own thoughts.
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"If we could do anything we wanted, right now, what would you want to do?"
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asked Tim.
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"You mean anything? And not get in trouble with our folks or anybody?"
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"Yeah, we could do ANYTHING we wanted and not get in trouble."
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Pointing to the water tower two blocks away on Clove street, Dan said, "I'd
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want to climb that water tower."
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"Same here," said Tim. He looked at the water tower and squinted as the
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bright afternoon sun reflected off the tower's polished metal surfaces.
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The water tower stood nearly ninety feet above the surrounding area, its four
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legs supporting a tank twenty-five feet in diameter and fifteen feet in depth.
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It was a tempting quest for young boys with a proclivity toward climbing, but
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Tim and Dan rarely went near it. They saw the large red "Keep Out" signs and
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the tall chain link fence, but it was not these that kept Tim and Dan from
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climbing it. It was fear of corporal punishment by their parents, it was fear
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of having their bottoms blistered, it was fear of being unable, without pain,
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to sit down for a week.
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"You know," said Tim, "that fence around the water tower would be a snap to
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climb."
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"Yeah. The corner by Hanson's house would be easiest. We could climb right
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over without even touching the barbed wire," said Dan. "But we'd have to find
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a way to reach the bottom of the ladder on the tower because it starts about
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ten feet off the ground."
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Tim laughed and said, "I suppose that's to keep little kids like us from
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climbing it. But it wouldn't take us very long to figure out how to reach that
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ladder."
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"I got a two-by-four at home that would reach almost to the bottom of the
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ladder," said Dan, "and we could shinny up that, then grab the bottom rung.
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From there it'd be easy."
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"Or we could throw a rope over the bottom rung and climb that," added Tim.
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Seeing people and things in the clouds during the last two days had taught
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Tim and Dan to use their imaginations to great effect. And using their
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imaginations, Tim and Dan finally began to climb the water tower they always
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dreamt of climbing, the water tower they were forbidden by their parents to
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even go near.
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"Once we got up there, I'd wanna make a couple paper airplanes and throw 'em
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off," said Dan.
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"Hey, that'd be neat," said Tim. "Maybe we could carry some rocks with us
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too, and see how far we could throw 'em."
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"Yeah, and then we could wait for Jimmy Hanson to come by. Boy, he'd be
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jealous seeing us up there wouldn't he?"
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A hollering voice from down the street interrupted the boys imagined climb of
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the forbidden water tower: "Dan! Time to come home! Dinner!" It was Dan's
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mother.
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"Aw heck," said Dan, getting up off the grass. "That was kinda fun." He took
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one step in the direction of home, stopped, reached down and touched Tim on the
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shoulder. "Touched ya last!" he yelled and took off running as fast as he
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could for home. Tim scrambled to his feet and chased Dan in serious pursuit.
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Though only a childish game of tag, being the last one touched was a great
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dishonor.
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"Wanna climb that mountain today?" asked Tim, pointing to the hill to the
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southwest.
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"You know our folks won't let us go that far," said Dan.
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"No, but we can climb it just like we climbed the water tower yesterday. And
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just like we saw old man Whitney in the clouds the day before that."
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"You mean just IMAGINE climbing the mountain?"
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"Yeah, let's just imagine climbing it."
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So the boys began to imagine again, this time climbing the hill that to them
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was a mountain. They pictured themselves packing a lunch into knapsacks,
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riding their bikes to the base of the mountain, then walking up its northern
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ridge to the top. From there they imagined scanning the panoramic view,
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imagined looking down into the valley where they lived, imagined the far
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horizon they'd never seen.
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"This is what it looks like from an airplane," said Tim.
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"Yeah? How would you know," said Dan. "You've never been in an airplane."
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"Well, it must be what it looks like."
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"I wonder what it really DOES look like from an airplane," said Dan. And as
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the contrail of a high flying jet became visible overhead, Tim and Dan whisked
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themselves from the mountain top into the jet's cockpit and another imagined
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adventure.
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The following day found Tim and Dan lying in their familiar places,
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daydreaming again. They dreamt of running along the beaches and playing in the
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surf of the Pacific ocean. Another day found them in another daydream:
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sweltering under the fiery sun while crossing the desert sands of the Sahara,
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and yet another day found them throwing icy snowballs at each other over the
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north pole. Sometimes their daydreams were of adventures that could only be
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real in the imaginations of their eight year old minds: inspired by old black
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and white Tarzan movies, they swung on vines through the jungles of Africa
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following the spoor of the great apes; terrified by the monster Godzilla, they
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devised many plans for its demise should it leave Japan and come to America;
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humming the William Tell Overture, they rode with The Lone Ranger and Tonto in
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pursuit of bad guys.
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It was a pleasant summer for old man Whitney, though he often wondered who or
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what had replaced him as the hapless mark of Tim and Dan's playful mischief.
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Wearing cut off jeans, T-shirts, and old tennis shoes, Tim and Dan were again
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lying in the shade of their favorite tree. It was nearly the end of their
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summer vacation, a vacation filled with adventure, real and imagined. Dan
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looked into the late afternoon sky, pointed and said, "Look, there's the moon.
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Let's imagine we're there!"
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"Hey that's a great idea!" said Tim. The two boys closed their eyes and,
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with well-practiced and prolific imaginations, began a distant adventure on the
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moon.
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Taking advantage of the moon's one-sixth gravity, they ran and leaped like
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gazelles about the untouched and pristine lunar surface. They climbed up
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mountains and down into craters, and skipped gaily through the dusty plains of
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the Sea of Tranquility.
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Radio transmissions and printed transcripts of the first landing on the moon
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are not complete, the versions released to the public anyway. Some
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transmissions were classified of course, because NASA didn't want to help the
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Russians, and some were personal, and some transmissions were deleted
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completely:
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ARMSTRONG: Hey Buzz, come over here and take a look at this.
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ALDRIN: Give me a minute to pick up this stupid rock--gawd these suits are
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awkward--and I'll be right there. Where are you anyway?
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ARMSTRONG: Behind you about a hundred yards, up on this rise.
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ALDRIN: O.K., I see you. On my way.
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ALDRIN: What the hell! Those aren't our tracks!
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ARMSTRONG: They sure as hell aren't. They look like they were made by a
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couple of small boys wearing tennis shoes!
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