1. Perform a religious service? (As an acknowledged action, vice private thoughts)
--a) Pete Conrad. No. He was perhaps a tad too boisterous.
--b) Charlie Duke. No. His spiritual life grew more after he returned from the Moon.
--c) Buzz Aldrin. Yes. He administered Holy Communion to himself, and offered a prayer of thanks.
--d) Fred Haise. No. He didn't get to land, unfortunately.
2. Drive a wheeled vehicle? (As opposed to pushing or pulling the MET/wheeled cart)
--a) Jim Irwin. No. The LMP normally didn't get to drive.
--b) Walt Cunningham. No. Walt never visited the Moon.
--c) John Young. No. He was the second.
--d) Dave Scott. Yes. He drove the first LRV (Apollo 15).
3. Eat spaghetti? (Guess it just came down to menu choices)
--a) Al Bean. Yes. He was well known for his singularly favorite food, and made it a point to be the first.
--b) Neil Armstrong. No. Though he does eat it.
--c) Ken Mattingly. No. Ken didn't land.
--d) Dick Gordon. No. Dick didn't land either.
4. Have a bowel movement? (Even low residue diets will catch up with you)
--a) Jack Schmidt. No. Despite the horrible pun you can derive from his name.
--b) Pete Conrad. Yes. I'm basing this on a remark in a TV interview, and the dramatization in "From the Earth to the Moon." He was at least the first to talk much about it.
--c) Wally Schirra. No. Wally did everything except go the Moon.
--d) Jack Swigert. No. Jack didn't land.
5. Complain openly about the beverage service? (Well, getting caught on an open VOX channel, anyway)
--a) Frank Borman. No. Frank didn't land.
--b) Ed Mitchell. No. But he did channel some ESP-waves.
--c) Charlie Duke. No. He just had to listen to his CDR carry on about it.
--d) John Young. Yes. The orange drink fizzed-up his bowels something fierce.
6. Perform a successful automotive repair? Each CDR on the LRV-equipped missions managed to damage a fragile fender, but only one, with a lot of MOCR help, managed to affect a lasting repair. (Source: "Exploring Taurus-Littrow" By Harrison Scmitt, National Geographic, Sep '73, Vol 144, No. 3) NASM shows the repair.
--a) Charlie Duke. No. But he tried to help John Young fix his own fender damage.
--b) Buzz Aldrin. No. Buzz didn't drive on the Moon, and his PhD wasn't the same as a mechanic's license.
--c) Gene Cernan. Yes. Gene successfully used the maps, clamps and tape solution on LRV-3.
--d) Ray Magliozzi. No. Ray is one of the hosts of radio's "Car Talk" which was not on the air in 1972 to provide the crew with any advice.
7. Drive more than 12 miles on a single traverse? (Greatest Lunar Rover Vehicle distance on one EVA-19 kilometers (14 miles), and total distance traveled-35 kilometers (25 miles)
--a) Walt Cunningham. No. Walt never visited the Moon.
--b) Dave Scott. No. But he did get some good distance.
--c) John Young. No. But he stretched the boundaries a little more.
--d) Gene Cernan. Yes. Gene holds the single traverse distance record above.
8. Activate a nuclear reactor? (This would be the first ALSEP, with it's Radioisotope Thermolelectric Generator (RTG) power source.)
--a) Al Bean. Yes. Al had this ALSEP duty on Apollo 12.
--b) Neil Armstrong. No. The EASEP used solar panels.
9. Fly solo in the CSM? (In this case, flew solo as a CMP before he walked on the Moon as CDR.)
--a) Pete Conrad. No. Pete always had a crew aboard when he flew the CSM.
--b) Jack Schmitt. No. As a scientist first and pilot second, they didn't want him flying as much.
--c) Charles Lindburgh. No. he was first to solo over the Atlantic Ocean.
--d) John Young. Yes. He flew Charlie Brown solo around the Moon on Apollo 10 before taking command of Apollo 16.
10. Deal with the problems of Mission Rule 1-404 (This rule dealt with flying into stormclouds.)
--a) Frank Borman. No. But, as a CDR he probably read it somewhere.
--b) Ed Mitchell. No. He just had to worry about Al.
--c) Pete Conrad. Yes. Pete wisely didn't pull the abort handle during ascent through the thunderstorm.
--d) John Young. No. But he too probably had to read about it.
11. Erect a TV antenna? (The antenna helped carry other data besides TV)
--a) Buzz Aldrin. No. Though he did set up a lot of other stuff.
--b) Pete Conrad. Yes. Pete set up the deployable S-Band dish that provided abbreviated live color TV from the Ocean of Storms.
--c) Charlie Duke. No. But he might have helped set up the one mounted on LRV-2.
--d) Tim "The Toolman" Taylor. No. Not on the Moon, just on his TV show roof.
12. Get a "wetfoot?" (That is, getting his boots full of water from a malfunctioning EMU cooling system)
-- a) Charlie Duke. No. He got orange drink down the neck.
--b) Pete Conrad. Yes. He noticed his boots were soaked after EVA-1.
--c) Neil Armstrong. No. Though he might have been a little sweaty.
--d) Wally Schirra. No, Wally didn't go to the Moon.
13. Talk to someone in Australia? (Source: "Tracking Apollo to the Moon" by Hamish Lindsay).
--a) Neil Armstrong. No, It wasn't on the first landing mission.
--b) Ken Mattingly. No, Ken didn't land on the Moon.
--c) Paul Hogan. No, he's just a famous Australian.
--d) John Young. Yes, John (and Charlie Duke) chatted with an Australian controller at the Honeysuckle station when the lines to Houston were down.
14. Show his face? Most of the astros kept their gold visors down most of the time while on the surface.
--a) Story Musgrave. No, Story didn't make an Apollo flight.
--b) Jack Scmitt. No, but Jack was noticable for his frequently raised visor.
--c) Neil Armstrong. Yes, the "first stepper" was actually the first to be caught on film with his sunshield raised.
--d) Buzz Aldrin. Nope, Buzz was the second