Apollo Control, Houston, 2 minutes 50 seconds from time of L.O.S. now Our distance away from the Moon: 460 nautical miles Velocity: 74-17 feet per second Here in Mission Control we're standing by There's uh certainly a great deal of anxiety at this moment We acquire at 36 minutes, so So at 68 hours 55 minutes, continuing to monitor This is Apollo Control So at this time we're gonna stand by and continue to monitor the loops here in Mission Control For our 'go'/'no-go' decision 1 minute 30 seconds away now from Loss Of Signal Our distance away from the Moon now 401 nautical miles Velocity reading: 75-35 As we continue with this flight of Apollo 8 Apollo 8, Houston, 1 minute to L.O.S., all systems go Our flight control team in Mission Control here has examined the data and it looks good So we have a combined crew-ground decision We are 'go' for lunar orbit insertion 1 Apollo 8, 10 seconds to go, you're 'go' all the way [Transmission from Apollo 8 crew] We've had, uh, Loss Of Signal with Apollo 8 At 68 hours 58 minutes 45 seconds We will watch with continuing interest the A.O.S. clock here in Mission Control They're travelling over the back side of the Moon now Our velocity reading here: 7-7-7-7 feet per second Now we're in the [?] of the longest wait Continuing to monitor, this is Apollo Control, Houston Apollo Control, Houston, we've acquired signal but no voice contact yet We're standing by We're looking at engine data and it looks good Tank pressure's looking good Apollo 8, Apollo 8, this is Houston, Houston over [Transmission from Apollo 8 crew] Right, we've got it, we've got it Apollo 8 now in lunar orbit, there's a cheer in this room This is Apollo Control, Houston, switching now to the voice of Jim Lovell [Transmission from Apollo 8 crew] The unmanned lunar spacecraft traversed the moon perhaps over 10,000 times But this is the first that a man aboard reported to his compatriots here on Earth