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Old 08-April-2003, 07:25 AM
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kucharek kucharek is offline
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Location: Karlsruhe, Germany, Old Europe
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JSC photographic technician Terry Slezak gained some fame after the return of Apollo 11:

http://images.jsc.nasa.gov/images/pao/AS11/10075320.htm
Quote:
The first direct exposure to lunar material for Crew Reception personnel probably happened late Friday, July 25, 1969. Terry Slezak (displaying moon dust on his left hand fingers), Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) photographic technician, was removing film magazines from the first of two containers when the incident occurred. As he removed the plastic seal from Magazine S, one of the 70mm magazines taken during Apollo 11 Extravehicular Activity (EVA), it was apparent that the exterior of the cassette displayed traces of a black powdery substance. Apollo 11 Commander Neil Armstrong reported during the mission that he had retrieved a 70mm cassette which had dropped to the lunar surface.
Another point on the darkslide: IIRC, due to the reseau plate on the EVA-cameras, you had to remove the darkslide from the mag before attaching it to the camera. That's why they always had to advance a few frames before and after changing a mag.

Harald
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