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NASA Space Science

Apollo 13 Mission Manual Pages To Be Auctioned 96

astroengine writes "On April 13 — the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 13 accident — Bonhams in New York City will auction off pages from the Apollo 13 mission manual, with handwritten notes by flight commander Jim Lovell. I'm thinking the chances of actually outbidding a rich space enthusiast are slim to none, but having a chance at owning a piece of spaceflight history should be popular nonetheless." Here is an item listing page at Bonhams for one of those pages, which, as Gizmodo notes, saved three astronauts' lives.
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Apollo 13 Mission Manual Pages To Be Auctioned

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  • by BadAnalogyGuy ( 945258 ) <BadAnalogyGuy@gmail.com> on Wednesday April 07, 2010 @08:23AM (#31759772)

    Whoever it is selling this deserves a lot of pity. Whether it be NASA who needs the money or an old NASA employee (maybe astronaut?) who needs the money or an old collector who needs the money or the estate of an old collector or NASA employee that needs to liquidate it, there really must be a sad story behind the selling of an item that belongs in a museum.

  • My piece of space (Score:1, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07, 2010 @09:00AM (#31760018)

    Posting as AC, just in case....

    In 1969, NASA put the command module and some other stuff on a trailer and toured the state capitals. The capsule was not behind glass or anything. The walkway led past it, and only a railing separated the audience from the capsule. I reached over to touch the heat shield. It was surprisingly brittle, and I scratched it experimentally to see how hard it was. It wasn't, and a bunch came off under a couple of my nails. I looked around, but nobody noticed, so I went to my family's car and put the black stuff into a Jolly Rancher wrapper and tucked it safely away. Later, I put it into a cheap picture frame with a typewritten note. I have it today, sitting on the mantle, my misbegotten piece of the space program.

    It is my little reward, I guess, for all those predawns, getting up early on the West Coast to watch TV coverage of launches of the Mercury and then the Gemini missions and building endless models of the space crafts.

  • by Comboman ( 895500 ) on Wednesday April 07, 2010 @09:43AM (#31760460)

    In effect, no one will ever see it again. Why can't NASA give it to a museum?

    If you want to see it, go to the item listing page at Bonhams. [bonhams.com] You can see a high-resolution photo of both sides of the sheet. For the purposes of research or curiosity that's a much closer look than you would get if it were behind glass in a museum. Besides, even though the Air & Space museum is huge (they've got a Concorde, 727, SR-71, Space Shuttle, etc), they don't have room to preserve and display every piece of paper that an astronaut ever wrote on. This is ONE PAGE out a binder with hundreds of pages, which is one of thousands of binders NASA used in the space program. It's autographed on one side by Lovell, so I suspect this is from his personal binder and a some point he was using pages out of it for autographs instead of using photos. Just because something is collectible, doesn't mean it's historically significant.

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