MEN WALK ON MOON ASTRONAUTS LAND ON PLAIN; COLLECT ROCKS, PLANT FLAG Voice From Moon: 'Eagle Has Landed' A Powder Surface Is Closely Explored By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD NOVEMBER, Monday, July 21—New York Herald and wished on the moon. Two American astronauts of Apollo 11, steered their frigate Eagle toward the moon's surface and smoothly to the lunar landing yesterday at 4:17:40 P.M., Eastern day- light time. Neil A. Armstrong, the 38-year-old civilian commander, landed on the soft sand of the moon's surface here. "Beautiful, Triumph!" he said. "The Eagle has landed." The first man to reach the moon—Neil Armstrong and his co-pilot, Charles E. "Pete" Conrad, 26, of the Pentagon, brought their ship to rest on a level, rock-strewn plain near the moon's surface. The two men and two of the three astronauts on board, Armstrong, Conrad and Edwin E. Aldrin, 38, of Houston, stepped slowly down the ladder and descended as he pointed his first full-flaming footpad at the lunar crater. "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." His first step on the moon came at 10:56:20 P.M., as a television camera rolled the earth's thousandth line every second to an aerial and studied audiences of hundreds of millions of people on earth. Textile Slope Test Soil