Two college students discovered a set of NASA
flight suits at a thrift store in Titusville, Florida, and paid 20 cents per
outfit for the rare finds. WKMG in Orlando shared news of the bonanza on Monday.
Talia Rappa and Skyler Ashworth hit up the
blow-out discounts at a Salvation Army thrift shop that was going out of
business, and Rappa discovered five blue flight suits and one white suit below
a pile of sweaters. The American Space Museum in
Florida says the suits are authentic. Names on the uniforms match those of NASA
astronauts George Nelson and Robert Parker and payload specialist Charles
Walker, all of whom flew on space shuttle missions in the 1980s.
Rappa and Ashworth both have connections
to space. Rappa studies astrophysics at the University of Central Florida.
Ashworth told WKMG his parents were involved with NASA communications during
the shuttle program era and he plans to enter an aerospace program at Eastern
Florida State College.
A tag inside one of the blue suits
identifies it as a "launch/entry coverall" made by ILC Space
Systems. The Smithsonian Institute
says this type of suit was used in the shuttle program from late 1982 to
1986.
You may have missed out on picking up
the NASA suits for a killer deal, but you can still own one. The American Space
Museum is scheduled to auction the
suits off on November 4. You'll just have to pay a lot more for them
than Rappa and Ashworth did. The museum estimates they could sell for $5,000
(£3,900, AU$6,400) each.
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