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Michael Collins (astronaut)
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===Test pilot=== [[File:ARPS Class III.jpg|thumb|right|alt=Two rows of men in front of a jet|ARPS Class III graduates. Front row: [[Ed Givens]], [[Tommie Benefield]], [[Charles Bassett]], [[Greg Neubeck]] and Collins. Back row: Al Atwell, Neil Garland, Jim Roman, Al Uhalt and [[Joe Engle]]]] Collins' MTD posting allowed him to accumulate over 1,500 flying hours, the minimum required for admission to the [[U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School|USAF Experimental Flight Test Pilot School]] at [[Edwards Air Force Base]], California. His application was successful, and on August 29, 1960, he became a member of Class 60C,{{sfn|Collins|2001|pp=13β17}} which included [[Frank Borman]], [[Jim Irwin]] and [[Thomas P. Stafford|Tom Stafford]], who later became astronauts. Military [[test pilot]] instruction started with the North American [[T-28 Trojan]], and proceeded through the high performance [[F-86 Sabre]], [[B-57 Canberra]], [[T-33 Shooting Star]], and the [[F-104 Starfighter]].{{sfn|Burgess|2013|p=118}} Collins was a heavy smoker, but quit in 1962 after suffering a particularly bad [[hangover]]. The next day, he spent what he described as the worst four hours of his life in the [[Right seat (cockpit)|co-pilot's seat]] of a [[B-52 Stratofortress]] while going through the initial stages of [[nicotine withdrawal]].{{sfn|Collins|2001|pp=153β155}} The inspiration for Collins in his decision to become a NASA astronaut was the [[Mercury Atlas 6]] flight of [[John Glenn]] on February 20, 1962, and the thought of being able to circle the Earth in 90 minutes. Collins applied for the second group of astronauts that year. To raise the numbers of Air Force pilots selected, the Air Force sent their best applicants to a "charm school". Medical and psychiatric examinations at [[Brooks Air Force Base]], Texas, and interviews at the [[Manned Spacecraft Center]] (MSC) in [[Houston]] followed. In mid-September, he found out he had not been accepted. It was a blow even though he did not expect to be selected. Collins rated the [[NASA Astronaut Group 2|second group of nine]] as better than the [[Mercury Seven]] who preceded them, or the five groups that followed, including his own.{{sfn|Collins|2001|pp=25β33}} That year the USAF Experimental Flight Test Pilot School became the USAF Aerospace Research Pilot School (ARPS),{{sfn|Hansen|2005|p=347}} as the Air Force tried to enter into space research through the [[X-15]] and [[Boeing X-20 Dyna-Soar|X-20]] programs. Collins applied for a new postgraduate course offered into the basics of spaceflight. He was accepted into the third class on October 22, 1962. Other students in his eleven-member class included three future astronauts: [[Charles Bassett]], [[Edward Givens]] and [[Joe Engle]].{{sfn|Burgess|2013|pp=18β19}} Along with classwork, they also flew up to about {{convert|90000|ft}} in [[Lockheed F-104 Starfighter|F-104 Starfighters]]. As they passed through the top of their arc, they would experience a brief period of [[weightlessness]]. On finishing this course he returned to fighter operations in May 1963.{{sfn|Collins|2001|pp=34β40}} At the start of June, NASA once again called for astronaut applications. Collins went through the same process as with his first application, though he did not take the psychiatric evaluation. He was at [[Randolph Air Force Base]], Texas, on October 14 when [[Deke Slayton]], the [[Chief of the Astronaut Office]] at NASA, called and asked if he was still interested in becoming an astronaut. [[Charles Bassett]] was also accepted.{{sfn|Collins|2001|pp=40β46}} By this time Collins had flown over 3,000 hours, of which 2,700 were in jet aircraft.{{sfn|Burgess|2013|p=288}}
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