I found the drawing from 2 years ago.
*Tom Stafford in here*
And finally my love, smiley John Watts Young
Jim Lovell: “Just to be confined in there like a sardine in a can, that was a real trial. And, of course, you’re sitting right next to your companion, and for two weeks, being with Frank Borman… Two weeks being with Frank Borman any place was a real challenge. *laughs*”
Lovell: “Frank had a book called ‘Roughing it’ which we tried to read. We also sang to each other.”
Frank Borman: “Nat King Cole, at that time, had a very popular song: ‘Put your sweet lips a little closer to the phone’.”
Lovell: “*singing* Put your sweet lips a little closer to the phone, let’s pretend that you and I are all alone.”
Borman: “That got on our minds and we sang that damn song for two weeks. *laughs*”
Lovell, laughing: “We still sing it, occasionally.”
The Four Horsemen of the Moonpocalypse
(Art by me)
Jim McDivitt, Ed White, and Neil Armstrong link arms & test eating in zero gravity while aboard the Vomit Comet (unspecified date)
Astronaut Ed White walks in space, June 3, 1965.
(ASU/NASA)
The Apollo 1 prime and backup crew at a press conference in Houston a few days before Christmas, 1966. With them is chief astronaut Deke Slayton.
“He might as well have been the brother I never had… There was something special about him. He really was the astronaut’s astronaut.”
I am aware that most of these NASA videos were created in no small part for propaganda purposes during the Cold War to promote the idea that Our Strong American Men Are Better Than The Russians but like
Yeah I think I will fall for it :)
Doodling some boys at work ☺️☺️☺️