This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-40540356
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Mike Pence ignores Nasa 'do not touch' sign | Mike Pence ignores Nasa 'do not touch' sign |
(35 minutes later) | |
US Vice-President Mike Pence has made a tongue-in-cheek apology to Nasa after a photo of him touching a piece of space flight equipment went viral. | US Vice-President Mike Pence has made a tongue-in-cheek apology to Nasa after a photo of him touching a piece of space flight equipment went viral. |
Mr Pence was visiting the Kennedy Space Center in Florida when he placed his hand on a piece of hardware - despite a large sign that read "do not touch". | Mr Pence was visiting the Kennedy Space Center in Florida when he placed his hand on a piece of hardware - despite a large sign that read "do not touch". |
He later apologised to Nasa on Twitter, joking that Florida Senator Marco Rubio "dared" him to do it. | He later apologised to Nasa on Twitter, joking that Florida Senator Marco Rubio "dared" him to do it. |
Nasa has assured Mr Pence the equipment was in need of a clean anyway. | Nasa has assured Mr Pence the equipment was in need of a clean anyway. |
The vice-president, who addressed Nasa staff at Cape Canaveral on Thursday, sparked a social media storm after a photo emerged of him touching a cover for the Orion spacecraft, which was labelled as a piece of "critical space flight hardware". | The vice-president, who addressed Nasa staff at Cape Canaveral on Thursday, sparked a social media storm after a photo emerged of him touching a cover for the Orion spacecraft, which was labelled as a piece of "critical space flight hardware". |
On Friday, Mr Pence apologised to the space agency - while pointing the finger at his colleague. | |
Nasa replied that it was OK, and said in a statement that "procedures require the hardware to be cleaned before tiles are bonded to the spacecraft, so touching the surface is absolutely okay." | Nasa replied that it was OK, and said in a statement that "procedures require the hardware to be cleaned before tiles are bonded to the spacecraft, so touching the surface is absolutely okay." |
If the hardware was not OK to touch, it "would have had a protective cover over it", Nasa added. | If the hardware was not OK to touch, it "would have had a protective cover over it", Nasa added. |
Mr Pence later posted a further tweet mocking the incident, replacing the Nasa hardware in the photo with a porcupine. | Mr Pence later posted a further tweet mocking the incident, replacing the Nasa hardware in the photo with a porcupine. |
The original photo had gone viral within hours - with some social media users criticising Mr Pence for ignoring the sign. | The original photo had gone viral within hours - with some social media users criticising Mr Pence for ignoring the sign. |
"Good to know our vice president has the self control of a sugar-charged third grader on a field trip," wrote Twitter user @KentoTFH. | "Good to know our vice president has the self control of a sugar-charged third grader on a field trip," wrote Twitter user @KentoTFH. |
Others said those criticising Mr Pence were taking the matter far too seriously, and injected a little humour into their tweets. | Others said those criticising Mr Pence were taking the matter far too seriously, and injected a little humour into their tweets. |
"After six months at Trump's side, Mike Pence quietly envies the capsule for its journey to the cold, tranquil emptiness of space," wrote @KevinMKruse. | "After six months at Trump's side, Mike Pence quietly envies the capsule for its journey to the cold, tranquil emptiness of space," wrote @KevinMKruse. |
Twitter user @Michael_Bell_, in reference to the administration's previous viral photo involving US President Donald Trump on a visit to Saudi Arabia, said: "Now, on to the orb of destiny!" | Twitter user @Michael_Bell_, in reference to the administration's previous viral photo involving US President Donald Trump on a visit to Saudi Arabia, said: "Now, on to the orb of destiny!" |
Previous version
1
Next version