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Panini Private Signings Walt Cunningham Autograph Signed NASA Apollo 7 #50/59

$ 78.67

Availability: 24 in stock
  • Card Number: 93
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Autograph Authentication: Panini Authentic
  • Modified Item: No
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Condition: New
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Signed by: Walt Cunningham
  • Signed: Yes
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    Panini Private Signings
    Walt Cunningham
    NASA Apollo Autographed Signed with Panini Guarantee Certified Authentic
    #50 of only 53 autographed
    Subject: Apollo Program
    Year: 2011
    Manufacturer: Panini
    Set: Private Signings
    Card #: 93
    Contains Authentic
    Walt Cunningham
    Autograph
    On Front  of the
    Card and Guarantee and # on the Back Of Card
    Condition: Please see the actual card in the pictures.
    Taken right out of the package and placed in a rigid card holder. Great Centering - Very Clean Edges and Corners!!!
    Shipping & Handling Notes: Cards Will Be Shipped In Rigid Card Holder To Insure No Scratches Are Produced During Shipping
    Ronnie Walter Cunningham (born March 16, 1932), (Col, USMCR, Ret.) is a retired American astronaut. In 1968, he was a Lunar Module Pilot on the Apollo 7 mission. He was NASA's third civilian astronaut (after Neil Armstrong and Elliot See), and has also been a fighter pilot, physicist, entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and author of The All-American Boys. In October 1963, Cunningham was one of the third group of astronauts selected by NASA. On October 11, 1968, he occupied the Lunar Module Pilot seat for the eleven-day flight of Apollo 7, the first launch of a manned Apollo mission.[1] The flight carried no Lunar Module and Cunningham was responsible for all spacecraft systems except launch and navigation. The crew kept busy with myriad system tests and successfully completed test firing of the service-module-engine ignition and measuring the accuracy of the spacecraft systems.[3] Schirra, with a cold, ran afoul of NASA management during the flight, but Cunningham went on to head up the Skylab Branch of the Astronaut Office and left NASA in 1971.
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