In october. This is almost 50 minutes. Thank you for coming out so early. We have a big program today. And we are very honored to have with us well, to start, and i think this is great chronologically, apollo seven astronaut walt cunningham. We will get into some questions, but will was on the apollo seven flight, which was really make or break for the apollo like program. They sent some unmanned ones up and they had the terrible fire on apollo 1. These guys made it happen. We had many legends on, but this is one of the greatest. Lets hear it for walt cunningham. [applause] that is a pretty good welcome. I keep hearing im going to call him glenn cunningham, the old quarterback. Im terrible with names. This is a great story. I want you to explain it. Evidently, number 13 and 14 had a lot to do with your career. Talk about it. Well, actually, like a lot of people, you learn things later that you did not know whether it was critical. But it must have been about 10 years ago, i get an emai
Fear from time to time and back in those days i think i was too stupid to be afraid. There is an attitudinal thing. I am not a psychologist, i read about a lot of that stuff. I think there is a difference in mentality about how people feel about these things. Recognizing it, being aware of it intellectually, is an important step. I think a lot of people are afraid of things because they do not have the faintest idea what is going to go on. So they are afraid of it. And those that learn about things, they may be afraid of it because of what they know. And then there is some kind of a mental quirk that a lot of my friends and people out there today are aware of. Brian, i know that he was aware of the things that could go wrong. And you have to have the kind of selfconfidence that enables you to handle that. That selfconfidence comes from the way you have lived. You faced a lot of lesser things along the way. And you have been able to overcome them. I am afraid we have a society that has