If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Bad Astronomy and Universe Today Forum > Space and Astronomy > Space Exploration
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 11-May-2005, 10:52 AM
Kiwi Kiwi is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 496
Default Apollo Astronauts - Joking Around

Some hoax-believers seem to be so po-faced and deadly serious about their pursuit of a conspiracy that they are quite put out and think it most inappropriate when they come across the astronauts cracking jokes. It's time we socked it to them.

Following are just a few examples that I like. Much of the humour is very subtle, dry, and consists of digs at crewmates or "in jokes" about other missions. Some are taken from "First on the Moon - A Voyage with Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr", written with Gene Farmer and Dora Jane Hamblin, epilogue by Arthur C. Clark. Michael Joseph Ltd, London (1970). Others are from the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal and the Spacecraft Films DVDs.

Please post your own favourites. Good references would be handy.


Apollo 11 - TV Transmission, GET33:59 - Star Charts
Part from "First on the Moon," page 135.
Times shown are from Spacecraft Films' Apollo 11 DVD No. 1 - Fly Me to the Moon - Television Transmissions 10:32 GET and 33:59 GET - Chapters 7 and 8.

59:35 Houston (Duke): Looks like a star chart coming into view now, over.
59:40 Collins: Yeah, those are Buzz's two star charts that he is using right now as sunshades over the right-hand window, window number five.
59:49 Houston (Duke): Roger. We see the sun shining in through it behind him [Buzz] and blotting out the equatorial - correction, ecliptic - plane, and the stars that you're using for the navigation.
1:00:02 Aldrin: You're right.
1:00:04 Collins: He doesn't really need the charts. He's got them memorized. This is just for show.
1:00:09 Houston (Duke - with a slight snigger): We copy.

Apollo 11 - During the translunar coast - Hands off!
"First on the Moon" pages 133 and 149.
Times shown are from Spacecraft Films' Apollo 11 DVD No. 1 - Fly Me to the Moon - Probe removal and LM checkout 55:08 GET - Chapter 12.

Collins: I'm not going to let these LM guys play with my DSKY [pronounced disky] any more.
Houston (Duke): You sound like you'd better protect it.
Later:
1:24:31 Houston (Duke): Is Collins going to go in [to the LM] and look around?
1:24:40 Armstrong: We're willing to let him go but he hasn't come up with the price of the ticket yet.
1:24:44 Houston (Duke): Rog. I'd advise him to keep his hands off the switches.
1:24:51 Collins: If I can get them to keep their hands off my DSKY it'd be a fair swap.
1:24:56 Houston (Duke): Roger.

Apollo 11 - Loss of communications
Seventeen minutes before the lunar module Eagle commences powered descent to the first manned lunar landing, Capcom Charlie Duke advises Mike Collins in the command module Columbia that Houston expects to temporarily lose communications with him via the high gain antenna.

102:16:00 Duke: Columbia, Houston. We expect to lose your high gain during the powered descent. Over.
102:16:19 Collins: Columbia. Roger. You don't much care do you?
102:16:22 Duke: No, sir.

Apollo 11 - Aldrin egress
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 11 DVD No. 2 - EVA Part 1 - Chapter 5 - 20:53 and 21:13

109:41:28 Aldrin: Okay. Now I want to back up and partially close the hatch. (Long Pause) (Wryly Making sure not to lock it on my way out.
109:41:53 Armstrong: (Laughs) A particularly good thought.
[The hatch can be opened from the outside, if necessary. The reason for almost closing the hatch is, I believe, to prevent radiative cooling of the cabin. Neither Neil or Buzz remembered any specific reason.]
[Armstrong - (Straight-faced) "To avoid having somebody say 'Were you born in a barn?'"]

Apollo 17 - EVA-1 - Taurus-Littrow valley
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 2 - EVA 1 - Deploying and Loading the Rover - 28:23

117:55:33 Cernan: Okay. On the plains of Taurus-Littrow. What a valley. I'd like to cut through here with a T-38 sometime.
[The T-38 is a supersonic jet aircraft and Gene is imagining roaring up the valley at about 500 knots.]
117:55:44 Schmitt: That'll be the day.
[Jack says that, here, his intent was to mimic John Wayne.]
117:55:46 Cernan: Yeah, it will.
[There being no air on the Moon in which to fly a T-38.]

Apollo 17 - EVA-1 - Station 1 - Get Driving in Ten Minutes
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 3 - EVA 1 - Station 1 - 16:33

122:22:37 Parker: And, 17; we'd like to have you guys... driving in 10 minutes, please.
122:22:45 Schmitt: Nag, nag, nag.
122:22:49 Parker: That's right, that's right, that's right.

Apollo 17 - EVA-1 - Sep site - Antennae Problems
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 3 - EVA 1 - Sep Site - 2:19

122:56:51 Schmitt: Okay, I won't bore you with details on why you see the antenna all over the ground (chuckles), but it has to do with one-sixth g.
122:57:10 Parker: Roger, Jack. Understand you dropped a couple of the antenna reels.
[In Houston, Bob is being told that the antenna reels and wires can rapidly become a "Chinese Puzzle" unless they are untangled very carefully.]
122:57:13 Schmitt: ...More accurately, I dropped three of them.

Apollo 17 - EVA-1 - Sep site - More Antennae Problems
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 3 - EVA 1 - Sep Site - 8:00

123:02:28 [Jack heads south; Gene drops his antenna.]
123:02:29 Cernan: Oh, (sub-vocally) [bad word deleted]...
123:02:34 Schmitt: (Taunting) Ha, ha, ha. Ha, ha, ha. Serves you right.
[Jack returns to the transmitter; Gene retrieves the antenna with his tongs.]

Apollo 17 - EVA-1 - Sep site - Appreciation
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 3 - EVA 1 - Sep Site - 11:48

123:06:17 Parker: Yeah, the "locator" is really all you need; but a partial pan to show the area would be appreciated.
123:06:24 Cernan: Yeah, I'm here. I'm going to get a partial pan, Bob.
123:06:27 Parker: Okay.
123:06:32 Cernan: The only reason I'm doing it is I know it would be appreciated.

Apollo 17 - EVA-1 Close-out - Clear Seal
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 3 - EVA 1 - Close-out - 4:48

123:22:56 Cernan: Bob, the seal is clear.
123:22:58 Parker: Beautiful.
123:23:02 Cernan: I don't know if it's beautiful, but it's clear.
123:23:06 Parker: It's clearly beautiful.

Apollo 17 - EVA-2 - Station 2, Nansen Crater - Flying Rock
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 3 - EVA 2 - Station 2 - 45:17

143:30:55 Approximately: [Gene gets the hammer and knocks a piece off on the third stroke. The piece comes off to Gene's left and he tries to grab it. He manages to touch it and, in so doing, knocks it into Jack's left wrist. The fragment bounces off of Jack's wrist and slowly falls to the ground behind him.]
143:31:02 Cernan: See it?
143:31:03 Schmitt: Yeah. See it!? You hit me with it!
143:31:09 Cernan: Well, I tried to catch it. Bob, you still there?
143:31:14 Parker: Roger. Still there. Listening with great delight.

Apollo 17 - EVA-2 - Traverse to Station 3 - Alien tracks?
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 3 - EVA 2 - Traverse to Station 3 - 32:02

144:18:01 Schmitt: Hey! We crossed somebody's tracks!
144:18:07 Parker (over Gene): Hope they look like yours.

Apollo 17 - EVA-2 - Station 3, Ballet Crater - Jack Schmitt gives the crater its name
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 4 - EVA-2 - Station 3 - 20:09 and 25:50

144:50:46 Parker: Okay. We're ready now for your pan and don't forget your scoop.
144:50:52 Schmitt: I won't...Aaaahh! (Pause)
[Jack has knocked the SCB over, scattering full sample bags. He drops to his hands and knees, facing upslope, gets the SCB standing upright, retrieves the sample bags, and stows them in the SCB without getting up.]
144:51:05 Schmitt: You don't mind a little dirt here and there, do you, gang?
144:51:16 Parker: No.
[Jack leans back to get his PLSS over his heels and kicks upright. He makes it, but drops the SCB in the process. He goes to one knee to retrieve it but stumbles and falls on his chest. He gets up successfully and goes to the scoop.]
144:51:46 Cernan: Oh, dadgummit! (Pause) Well...
[From later evidence, Gene is having trouble re-attaching the rake to the extension handle. Meanwhile, Jack's unused sample bags have fallen off his camera again.]
144:51:53 Parker: Hey, Gene, would you go over and help Twinkletoes, please?
[Jack drops the SCB on the ground.]
A little later:
144:56:23 Parker: And be advised that the switchboard here at MSC (Manned Spacecraft Center, now the Johnson Space Center) has been lit up by calls from the Houston Ballet Foundation requesting your services for next season.
144:56:34 Schmitt: I should hope so.
144:56:39 ...[On camera, Jack is going for the gnomon. In response to Bob's 'Ballet' comment, he does two, big, one-footed hops on his right leg, with his left leg extended up and back, flexed at the knee. He is on the outer slope of the crater, hopping toward the rim. After the second hop, he loses his balance and falls on his hands and knees. Clearly, he is playing. Fendell pans away.]
144:56:46 Schmitt (Asking Bob about his ballet style): How's that?

Apollo 17 - EVA-2 - Station 4, Shorty Crater - Orange soil vs gray soil.
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 4 - EVA-2 - Station 4 - 12:30

145:36:14 Parker: 17, Houston. We'd like to get the double core here instead of the small can. Double core, please, instead of the small can.
145:36:23 Cernan: Okay.
145:36:24 Schmitt: Did you want it in the orange?
[A chorus of voices in Houston says "Yes".]
145:36:26 Parker: Roger. That's affirm. We can put cores in gray soil all the time.

Apollo 17 - EVA-2 - Close-out - 500mm Lens
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 4 - EVA-2 - Close-out - 24:19 to 25:03
Gene Cernan is taking photos of North Massif with the 500mm lens. Motion caused by the winder can been seen at the end of the lens.

147:38:21 Parker: …Tell Gene that we can confirm that his lens cover's off.
[As can be seen in the TV, the lens cap is hanging free, attached to the barrel of the lens with a strap. After finishing a sequence of South Massif photos, Gene turns his attention to the North Massif, taking a right-to-left sequence starting just west of Wessex Cleft. He actually does three sequences of the summit area and then finishes up with a sequence across the face of the mountain, starting to the left of the large boulder track. AS17-144- 22105 to 22132 are his North Massif pictures. Frame 22129 shows the boulder track.]
147:38:32 Schmitt: Okay. (To Gene) They confirm that your lens cover's off.
[Needless to say, Gene can hear Bob perfectly well. The humor here is exceedingly dry.]

Apollo 17 EVA-3 Traverse to Station 6 - Keep Station 8
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 4 - EVA-3 - Traverse to Station 6 - 24:23

164:36:19 Schmitt: I wouldn't eliminate Station 8 for the world - or the Moon - whatever's available today.


[Edited to improve readability and include finding aids for the Spacecraft Films DVDs.]

[Fixed greengrocer's apostrophe.]
Reply With Quote
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 11-May-2005, 10:40 PM
Count Zero's Avatar
Count Zero Count Zero is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Dallas, Texas
Posts: 953
Default

One of the legends of Apollo is that, before he left for the moon, they had to talk Armstrong out of saying "I claim this land for Texas," when he stepped off the LM.
__________________
"Transport of the mails, transport of the human voice, transport of flickering pictures - in this century, as in others, our highest accomplishments still have the single aim of bringing men together." St. Exupery
Reply With Quote
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 11-May-2005, 11:27 PM
The Spooky One The Spooky One is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 2
Default

It´s from "From The Earth To The Moon", so it´s not "official" ..... but funny, never the less !

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...=quotes-trivia

"discussing what Neil Armstrong will say when he steps onto the surface of the moon
Frank Borman: What are you guys gonna say?
Michael Collins: If you had any balls, you'd say "Oh, my God, what is that thing?" then scream and cut your mike."
Reply With Quote
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 12-May-2005, 01:19 PM
Kiwi Kiwi is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 496
Default

Apollo 17 — Station 8 — Schmitt "skis" downhill to the Rover
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 4 - EVA-3 - Station 8 - 17:39

167:07:22 Cernan: Jack, did you get a pan up here?
167:07:24 Schmitt: No.
167:07:25 Cernan: I'll get one.
167:07:26 Schmitt: Good, I forgot. I got interested in skiing.
[Jack switches to a two-footed skiing stance and makes repeated sounds of skis gliding and, as he goes, trying to hop from side to side.]
167:07:39 Schmitt: Shhh. Shhh. Shhh. Shhh. Shhh. Shhh. Whoo! Can't keep my edges. (Pause) Shhhoomp. Shhhoomp. Little hard to get a good hip rotation.


Apollo 17 — Station 8 — The gnomon
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 4 - EVA-3 - Station 8 - 19:28

167:09:11 Parker: Okay. I presume Gene's got the gnomon up there?
167:09:15 Schmitt: Yeah. I should have brought it, but...
167:09:17 Parker: Okay. Don't forget the gnomon, Gene.
167:09:18 Schmitt: ...I didn't think about it…
167:09:22 Cernan: (Grabbing the gnomon and starting downhill) Don't forget the Gene, gnomon!
Reply With Quote
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 14-May-2005, 07:24 AM
Kiwi Kiwi is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 496
Default

Note that two posts above have been edited to improve readability and include finding aids for the Spacecraft Films DVDs.

Apollo 17 EVA-3 Station 9 - Five More Minutes
Spacecraft Films' Apollo 17 DVD No. 5 - EVA-3 - Station 9 - 33:02 to 37:38 (Heavily edited)
Not so much a joke, but good humour when time constraints clash with a useful find. One of those times when the engineers are exasperated and the geologists delighted.

168:28:22 Parker: (After a great deal of discussion in Houston) Okay, 17. We'd like you to press on. We'll abort the radial sample. We'd like to leave here immediately, if not sooner, to head for Station 10…
...168:29:21 Cernan: Jack, you ought to get a scoop of that dirt, though.
...168:29:36 Schmitt: Yeah, we'll get a scoop of it.
...168:29:39 Parker: 17, we're anxious for you guys to get going.
...168:29:59 Schmitt: Come here, Gene, quickly. We can't leave this.
168:30:02 Cernan: What do you got?
168:30:06 Schmitt: This may be the youngest mantle over whatever was... thrown out of the crater.
168:30:13 Cernan: Take pictures of it. Bob, we've got to take 5 more minutes. We'll be right with you.
...[Schmitt - (Laughing) "It doesn't take much to get your enthusiasm back up. Because, all of a sudden, there's a whole different tone in my voice. It may be a combination of having seen something different and the fact that Houston's now put some pressure on us to get out of there."]
[Cernan - "It also shows that you've got to have someone on the spot to make a decision. They're saying get out and we're saying 'Sorry, guys, we're not going to get out for five minutes because we've got something we think is worthwhile.' That's the way you have to operate. The ground is an advisor; it's a flight planner; it's a lot of things. But you've got to make the decisions of what you're going to do with your time."]
...168:32:11 Cernan: You with us, Bob?
168:32:12 Parker: Roger. We're with you.
168:32:13 Schmitt: He's mad at us now.
168:32:16 Parker: How'd you guess?
[Houston has been discussing a possible extension at this station. However, the Flight Director is concerned about tired hands.]
...168:32:29 Schmitt: Bob, a possibility here is that this upper 6 inches of gray material, in here, is the latest mantling in the area and the light-colored debris may be what's left over from the (Van Serg) impact.
168:32:45 Parker: Okay, I copy. I understand. But we'd like to get you going. (Pause) In case you didn't get the clue.
168:32:51 Schmitt: I know.
168:32:52 Cernan: We're going.
As it turned out, they didn't go immediately. Houston changed its mind and cancelled Station 10.
Reply With Quote
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 15-May-2005, 06:31 AM
PhantomWolf's Avatar
PhantomWolf PhantomWolf is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Lost Deimos Moon Base
Posts: 5,629
Send a message via ICQ to PhantomWolf Send a message via AIM to PhantomWolf Send a message via MSN to PhantomWolf Send a message via Yahoo to PhantomWolf
Default

I can't believe you missed this little gem from Apollo 17

121:35:45 Schmitt: (Singing) I was strolling on the Moon one day...

121:35:49 LM Crew: (Both singing)...in the merry, merry month of

121:35:51 Cernan: May. Schmitt: December.

121:35:52 Cernan: No, May.

121:35:54 Schmitt: May.

121:35:55 Cernan: May's the month this year.

121:35:56 Schmitt: May. That's right.

121:35:57 Cernan: May is the year, the month.

121:36:00 Schmitt: (Singing) When much to my surprise, a pair of bonny eyes...be-doop-doo-doo...

121:36:05 Parker: Sorry about that, guys, but today may be December.

[Schmitt - "We had worked hard, and our fingers, our hands, and our arms were very tired. But it was still fun. And, without the aches in our arms and hands, it would have been even more fun."]
[The song "While Strolling through the Park One Day" was written by Ed Haley in 1884.]

121:36:08 Cernan: Okay, the battery cover...

121:36:13 Schmitt: (Humming the same song) Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-dee-da-dee...
__________________
Howling from the Shadows

It must be fun to lead a life completely unburdened by reality. --- JayUtah

You can't reason an irrational person out of an irrational belief. --- Noclevername

Apollo: The History and the Hoax
Enter the World of Athran
Reply With Quote
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 17-May-2005, 10:16 AM
Kiwi Kiwi is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 496
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by PhantomWolf
I can't believe you missed this little gem from Apollo 17.... Da-da-da-da-da-da-da-dee-da-dee...
I didn't miss it -- it's just not a favourite. Being a teenager of the 60s who was much more into British R&B and mod groups -- The Who, Small Faces, Troggs, Dave Clark Five, Rolling Stones, and later, Cat Stevens – instead of the wimpish, flower-power, LSD-fueled, jingly-bell mush that came out of San Francisco or the ear-jarring, square-waved Jimi Hendix noise, the only thing I didn't like about the astronauts was their atrocious choice of music -- Frank Sinatra, Buck Owens and The Fifth Dimension's "Aquarius." As British music probably wouldn't have been acceptable to the American public, at least the astronauts could have had the good taste to associate with the likes of The Byrds, Bob Dylan, Simon and Garfunkel, the Everly Brothers, Peter Paul and Mary, Creedence Clearwater Revival, or the greatest of all, Buddy Holly. Jack Schmitt, bless him, showed real class by including the name of one of Buddy's songs in Gene Cernan's T-38 joke.
Reply With Quote
  #8 (permalink)  
Old 17-May-2005, 10:20 AM
Kiwi Kiwi is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 496
Default

Apollo 17 - Touchdown
113:02:11 Cernan: Okay, Houston. The Challenger has landed!
113:02:15 Fullerton: Roger, Challenger. That's super…
113:02:23 Cernan: (Responding to Fullerton) Boy, you bet it is, Gordo. (To Jack) Boy, when you said shut down, I shut down and we dropped, didn't we?
113:02:28 Schmitt: Yes, sir! But we is here.
113:02:30 Cernan: Man, is we here.
Reply With Quote
  #9 (permalink)  
Old 17-May-2005, 04:05 PM
pghnative's Avatar
pghnative pghnative is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 2,170
Default

Apollo 12, from ALSJ
115:22:09 Conrad: Okay. (Pause) Down to the pad. (TV still)
115:22:15 Bean: Okay.

[After pausing on the next to last rung, Pete steps down to the last one, gets his hands in position and jumps down, sliding his hands along the outside rails as he drops. Once he gets down to the footpad, the bottom rung is about level with his waist. (TV still)]

115:22:16 Conrad: (As he lands) Whoopie! Man, that may have been a small one for Neil, but that's a long one for me.
Reply With Quote
  #10 (permalink)  
Old 23-May-2005, 05:35 AM
Peter B Peter B is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Oz, Down Under, Land of the Long Weekend
Posts: 1,366
Default

My favourite (at the moment, at least) is from Apollo 16:

120:14:34 Duke: Ah, the old maps! Which old map do you want to look at, John? Hmm. Just like training. Good picture of Hadley Rille (the Apollo 15 site). (Pause) I'm just teasing, Houston.

Reply With Quote
  #11 (permalink)  
Old 27-June-2005, 02:41 AM
ajv ajv is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 60
Default

Apollo 12, from AFJ

As you recall, the Apollo 12 launch vehicle was struck by lightning twice just after takeoff. So with that in mind...

002:08:36 Bean (onboard): When - when do we do TLI?
...
002:08:44 Gordon (onboard): Shoot; 2 hours and 6 minutes ago, you'd have been satisfied with a safe abort. Now, you want to do TLI.
Reply With Quote
  #12 (permalink)  
Old 27-June-2005, 04:20 AM
Peter B Peter B is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Oz, Down Under, Land of the Long Weekend
Posts: 1,366
Default

Well, that's the first I knew that there was an Apollo 12 Flight Journal. Plenty of fun reading already!
Reply With Quote
  #13 (permalink)  
Old 27-June-2005, 10:39 AM
Obviousman's Avatar
Obviousman Obviousman is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: NSW, Australia
Posts: 569
Default

It's not Apollo, but I liked it anyways:



The X-15 pilots clown around in front of the #2 aircraft. From left to right: USAF Capt. Joseph Engle, USAF Maj. Robert Rushworth, NASA test pilot John "Jack" McKay, USAF Maj. William "Pete" Knight, NASA test pilot Milton Thompson, and NASA test pilot William Dana.

(Hey sweetie - does my butt look big in this suit?)

8)
__________________
"For ignorance to reign, all it takes is for knowledgable people to say nothing"

Lonewulf
Reply With Quote
  #14 (permalink)  
Old 27-June-2005, 01:57 PM
Kiwi Kiwi is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 496
Default

I forgot about this one -- Apollo 11:

109:49:40 Aldrin: Hey, Neil, didn't I say we might see some purple rocks?

109:49:42 Armstrong: Find a purple rock?

Aldrin - "The statement about 'purple' rocks was really a stretch of being kind of facetious (that is, he was joking). But it didn't come off. Since it didn't come off well, I let it go at that. What I was kind of thinking of was 'what's the most absurd color you could think of for a rock?' 'Purple.' But it just didn't come out right."]


http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/a11.step.html
Reply With Quote
  #15 (permalink)  
Old 27-June-2005, 02:05 PM
kucharek's Avatar
kucharek kucharek is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Karlsruhe, Germany, Old Europe
Posts: 4,052
Default

I like the one from Apollo 10 after separation of LM and CSM, when Stafford or Cernan asked Young: "Have a good time while we're gone, Babe...and don't get lonesome out there, John. And don't accept any TEI (trans Earth injection) updates."

Young: "Don't you worry, until you get back, I ain't copying any more pads."
__________________
"Flying in space is risky business, but just staying on this planet is risky business too." - John Young, astronaut
Reply With Quote
  #16 (permalink)  
Old 27-June-2005, 11:55 PM
AGN Fuel's Avatar
AGN Fuel AGN Fuel is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: The beautiful Central Coast, NSW
Posts: 2,236
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Obviousman
....and NASA test pilot William Dana.
Bill Dana? As in 'Jose Jimenez' Bill Dana?

Was this coincidence, an extension of the joke or a career change??
__________________
"I'd take the awe of understanding over the awe of ignorance any day." - Douglas Adams
Reply With Quote
  #17 (permalink)  
Old 28-June-2005, 12:31 AM
Maksutov's Avatar
Maksutov Maksutov is offline
Honored Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Fifth corner of the Earth
Posts: 16,731
Default Re: Apollo Astronauts - Joking Around

Quote:
Originally Posted by Obviousman
It's not Apollo, but I liked it anyways:
[edit]
The X-15 pilots clown around in front of the #2 aircraft. From left to right: USAF Capt. Joseph Engle, USAF Maj. Robert Rushworth, NASA test pilot John "Jack" McKay, USAF Maj. William "Pete" Knight, NASA test pilot Milton Thompson, and NASA test pilot William Dana.

(Hey sweetie - does my butt look big in this suit?)

8)
Those are obviously aliens. No human beings would wear their helmets like that! Ditto re stacking books. :wink:

BTW, William H. Dana (he of the ironic name) piloted 16 X-15 flights. To the best of my knowledge he never landed in Nebada.
__________________
A person's name, or a mark representing it, as signed personally or by deputy, as in subscribing a letter or other document.
Reply With Quote
  #18 (permalink)  
Old 28-June-2005, 05:13 AM
DataCable DataCable is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 2003
Posts: 439
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Obviousman
(Hey sweetie - does my butt look big in this suit?)
Well, at least one of them can find it with both hands. :-k
__________________
"Earth diameter is 7,900 miles, and Moon diameter is 2,160 miles. It takes on average 90 minutes to complete one Earth orbit, so one Moon orbit should take roughly 25 minutes." - Sam "NasaScam" Colby

Bearer of the highly coveted "I found Venus in nine Apollo photos" sweatsocks.

DataCable^2008 A+
Reply With Quote
  #19 (permalink)  
Old 28-June-2005, 05:44 AM
mickal555 mickal555 is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
Posts: 7,122
Send a message via ICQ to mickal555 Send a message via AIM to mickal555 Send a message via MSN to mickal555 Send a message via Yahoo to mickal555