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China Wants to Make a Mark in Space—But It'll Need a Little Help

China Wants to Make a Mark in Space—But It'll Need a Little Help

China Wants to Make a Mark in Space—But It'll Need a Little Help

Science, Spoken · SpokenLayer

February 19, 20181m 15s

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Show Notes

In a China Global Television Network video from 2003, taikonaut Yang Liwei leans back in his orbital capsule, the overstuffed stripes of his spacesuit legs filling the frame. His helmet shield is up, so the viewer can gaze into his eyes as he speaks: “Greetings to people around the world!” His eyes move leftward, out of the frame. “Greetings to my colleagues in space!” he says. Liwei was China’s first astronaut, reaching orbit decades after US and Soviet space-farers.

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