RULE No. 10 Never cut and Paste from WIKIPEDIA
Sir Grappler Truth Teller OAM wrote on Nov 2
nd, 2015 at 10:43pm:
Just watched Apollo Thirteen again - clan member was one of three flight controllers there.....
"During the Apollo 13 crisis, xxxxxx played a key role. Coming on shift an hour after the oxygen tank explosion that put the crew's lives in jeopardy, xxxxxx and his team faced the unprecedented challenge of having to power up the lunar module on an extremely tight timeline, while transferring guidance and navigation data to it from the dying command module. His excellent memory and quick thinking were critical in the success of his team during the ensuing hours. Ken Mattingly, the astronaut who had been bumped from the Apollo 13 crew due to his exposure to German measles, later called xxxxxx's performance "the most magnificent display of personal leadership that I’ve ever seen".
Some said his excellent memory and thinking was so fast that he "would drive you crazy".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glynn_LunneyNice cut and paste Crappler

.
Glynn S. Lunney (born November 27, 1936) is a retired NASA engineer. An employee of NASA since its creation in 1958, Lunney was a flight director during the Gemini and Apollo programs, and was on duty during historic events such as the Apollo 11 lunar ascent and the pivotal hours of the Apollo 13 crisis. At the end of the Apollo program, he became manager of the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project, the first collaboration in spaceflight between the United States and the Soviet Union. Later, he served as manager of the Space Shuttle program before leaving NASA in 1985 and later becoming a vice president of the United Space Alliance.
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During the Apollo 13 crisis, Lunney played a key role. Coming on shift an hour after the oxygen tank explosion that put the crew's lives in jeopardy, Lunney and his team faced the unprecedented challenge of having to power up the lunar module on an extremely tight timeline, while transferring guidance and navigation data to it from the dying command module. His excellent memory and quick thinking were critical in the success of his team during the ensuing hours. Ken Mattingly, the astronaut who had been bumped from the Apollo 13 crew due to his exposure to German measles, later called Lunney's performance "the most magnificent display of personal leadership that I’ve ever seen".[23] On the day following the Apollo 13 splashdown, Lunney joined his fellow flight directors in accepting the Presidential Medal of Freedom as a member of the Apollo 13 mission operations team. The award was made by President Nixon during a ceremony at the Manned Spacecraft Center.

Its so secret its on wikipedia

Next you will be commanding the mars mission.
I feel a "My time at NASA" PDF file coming on.