Yes, I discovered the excellent Roundup newspapers a few years ago the same way you did - Googled a subject and got a link to one of them. Was astounded at the information they have and that I'd never heard of them before.
But now I have 391 of them from 1961 to 1976 saved on my hard drive. It's good to just browse them when at a loose end. Some of the people become much more than just a name, and we can learn about people and things we know little about or haven't even heard of.
They're no doubt another excellent source that HBs can mine for information about Lunar Orbiter, Ranger, Surveyor, Mercury, Gemini and Apollo that will "prove" the moonlandings were faked.
How would they explain away the article of 26 February 1971, "Over 40 million see moon rocks, visit space agency facilities"?
On the page in your link a stray "r" has found its way into Glynn Lunney's surname. "Lunnery."
Roundup
Vol. 10 No. 8 – February 26, 1971, page 2
Over 40 million see moon rocks, visit space agency facilities
Over forty-one million people in the United States and abroad lined up in 1970 to look at samples of rocks brought back from the Moon by the crews of Apollo 11 and 12. Another two million visited NASA facilities in the United States.
At EXPO '70 in Osaka, Japan, almost 14 million persons viewed a lunar rock sample which was one of the world fair's major exhibits.
In the Unites States, the rock samples were shown at some 128 events covering all 50 states with a total attendance of 12 million. Thirty-seven states had an opportunity to display a sample as part of a 50-state tour of the Apollo 11 command module and a lunar sample. The tour is due to end in May with Hawaii and Alaska the last two stops.
Outside the U.S., samples were shown to almost 30 million people in 110 countries.
During 1970, about three million visitors were attracted to NASA centers across the country. The largest numbers of people visited Kennedy Space Center and MSC, each of which was host to well over a million guests.