and gene cernan the last man to watch on the moon. he flew apollo 10 and 17. me, the program and fox news to have you all together. thank you so much for being here. jim, let me start with you. you sell this notebook looking to earn some extra money, you're running a restaurant now and nasa steps in and says you don't have the right, that property is ours, and what, we want it back? >> megyn, after 42 years, apollo 13 still has a problem. actually, the notebook is of no significance, but really what it really boils down to is the early days of the apollo astronauts we took back for our own use and our ownership the flight manuals, artifacts nasa has given us and we've kept them for many years. many of my contemporaries have now given these things to museums, and science centers and universities and colleges with the idea that they transferred ownerships to these various facilities. now, all of a sudden because the last thing i had in my drawer was this little checkbook that i was about ready to throw away, and i looked at it and saw that it had some significan