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HANDLING SAMPLES FROM THE MOON
Staffing the Lunar Receiving Laboratory
While most of the early planning for the lunar receiving laboratory
necessarily concentrated on the building and its equipment, the
scientists who were drawing up its functions continually pondered the
problem of providing a competent staff to operate it. The Space Science
Board's ad hoc committee (Harry Hess's group) saw merit in establishing
a "small but competent [scientific] staff headed by a scientist of
recognized stature" to maintain a modest research program, but felt
that "the problem of attracting a highly competent small staff is
serious,"67 presumably because the
environment at MSC did not appeal to scientists. The Houston center had
only a few scientists, most of them younger professionals who had yet to
establish their reputations and had little chance to do so in the roles
they were assigned.68 OSSA's ad hoc
committee proposed a permanent staff to sustain the laboratory,
supplemented by visiting scientists who would do much of the
experimental work On the lunar samples.69
As plans matured, however, and particularly as the requirement for
quarantine developed in 1965, the question of an organization and staff
for the laboratory became increasingly pressing. In early September,
James McLane, MSC's engineer in charge of the early planning, outlined
the peculiar requirements of the new laboratory in a five-page
memorandum. McLane noted that preliminary studies had pointed up the
need for a minimum of three persons to serve as an administrative staff:
a director, a technical director (chief scientist), and an assistant
technical director (sample curator), all of whom should be MSC civil
service employees. Major questions concerning the roles of these staff
members needed resolution. Where would they fit in the MSC organization?
What responsibility would they have in managing and distributing the
lunar samples? Should they be eminent scientists to satisfy the
scientific community? (At one time McLane had heard that a Nobel
laureate was being suggested.) How would differences between visiting
scientists and MSC's operations be settled? McLane urged that MSC and
Headquarters work out these details, define the positions, and start
recruiting. "It would be highly desirable," he said, "to
have at least one of these. . . positions filled reasonably early in the
final design phase (late 1965)." Concerning quarantine, McLane felt
that this might be better left to the Public Health Service; but
whatever was decided, definite responsibility should be assigned as soon
as possible.70
But while design studies went on under the pressure of the early-1969
schedule for beginning operations, laboratory organization and staffing
languished. Discussions with the Public Health Service and definition of
the PHS's role in quarantine took up most of the last half of 1965. MSC
and the Headquarters standing committee for the sample receiving
laboratory spent much of the first half of 1966 working over the lab
design. And when Congress balked at Houston's plan for the receiving
lab, considerable effort had to be given to justifying its existence and
its location. All in all, the lunar receiving laboratory created a
knotty management problem, which was probably complicated by the lack of
a focal point for science at MSC.
Early in 1966 the Planetology Subcommittee of OSSA's Space Science Steering
Committee,* worried by the lack of
progress in defining the scientific role of the receiving laboratory,
recommended that the standing committee monitor that aspect of the
planning and report periodically to the Steering Committee.71 After some discussion within OSSA, the
standing committee was replaced by a Lunar Receiving Laboratory Working
Group chaired by Dr. Clark Goodman of the physics faculty at the
University of Houston, a member of the Planetology Subcommittee. At its
first meeting on May 5, 1966, the group reviewed progress on laboratory
design and studied MSC's schedule for construction and activation of the
lab. MSC's presentation made no mention of staffing, and when the
question was raised it developed that no job descriptions were available
and no recruiting was under way for key positions. While members of the
working group were impressed by MSC's concept of the laboratory, they
were concerned about the lack of definition of its organization. Their
concern took the form of a resolution, in which they also recommended
that at least 12 civil-service positions be made available for
scientists in the LRL and stated the group's willingness to suggest
candidates.72 Later in the month MSC
prepared an estimate of staffing requirements that showed 33 resident
scientists (Ph.D. or equivalent) and provision to accommodate 15
visiting scientists working On grants from Headquarters.73
Houston's freedom to staff the receiving laboratory was restricted by
the budget cuts imposed by Congress, which ultimately reduced the number
of civil-service positions at the center by 84 in fiscal 1967.74 The LRL Working Group continued to press for
action while MSC struggled with the problem of fitting the laboratory
into its organization.75 A possible
alternative came to light in midsummer when the University of Houston
approached officials at MSC about managing the laboratory under
contract.76 The idea of using an
outside management contractor had been considered by MSC, and Houston
officials gave this initiative considerable thought. Early in September
a plan was drafted for consideration by Headquarters, calling for the
University of Houston, through its Houston Research Institute, to head a
consortium of regional universities to provide professional staff and
technical support for operations in the receiving lab.77 In further discussions with Headquarters MSC
stressed the value of a connection with the academic world and the
difficulty of staffing the laboratory under existing civil-service
restrictions.78
Headquarters wanted to look more closely at the situation, however, and
discussions continued through the rest of the year. NASA's top managers
evidently had visions that the lunar receiving laboratory would become a
national laboratory for lunar studies, in which case participation by
the academic community on a nationwide scale would be desirable.79 Meanwhile, MSC was directed to create a task
force to take care of the receiving laboratory's basic needs, extend
existing support contracts to meet immediate requirements, and await
developments.80 If additional
scientific talent was needed, other NASA centers could be called on to
provide it.81
During all these discussions, pressure from concerned groups mounted.
The LRL Working Group especially emphasized the need to name a director
for the laboratory. The Public Health Service felt that matters had
reached a point where an organization and staff were critical to further
progress, and suggested that the laboratory chief should be someone
thoroughly familiar with biomedical science generally and quarantine in
particular.82
In fact, MSC officials had finally come to recognize the need for more
than just a staff and organization for the receiving laboratory. By
mid-December the Houston center had decided to create a Science and
Applications Directorate, organizationally on a par with Max Faget's
Engineering and Development Directorate, in which all the center's
scientific activity would be centralized. [see
Chapter 6)] It would take over the activities of the Experiments
Program Office and the Space Sciences Division as well as a number of
other scientific functions scattered around the center. Robert O.
Piland, chief of the Experiments Program Office, would act as director
while a search was instituted for an established scientist to fill the
position.83 No director was named for
the lunar receiving laboratory; pending a permanent appointment, Joseph
V. Piland, project manager for LRL construction, was named acting
manager.
To provide the laboratory technicians who would prepare the lunar
receiving laboratory for operation, MSC turned to its support
contractors. In mid-January 1967 Gilruth notified Headquarters that he
intended to extend an existing contract with Brown & Root-Northrop,
which would furnish technicians for the receiving laboratory under the
direction of the project manager.84
Between completion of the laboratory and the first lunar mission, Brown
& Root-Northrop would train its employees in laboratory operations
and maintenance and prepare for an operational readiness inspection and
a rehearsal of a complete cycle of laboratory operation.
The Manned Spacecraft Center had recognized the need for a lunar sample
receiving laboratory and was willing to support it, but many MSC
engineers - and a few scientists as well - felt that the quarantine
facility and its elaborate precautions were unnecessary impediments to
Apollo operations. But however insignificant manned space flight
officials believed the risk of back-contamination to be, it was a risk
NASA could not afford to take. If they were wrong, the consequences
would be, as the scientists said, disastrous.
* The Space Sciences Steering
Committee, composed entirely of NASA employees, was responsible for
recommending science programs and projects to the Associate
Administrator for Space Science and Applications. Seven subcommittees,
each having about half its members from the outside scientific
community, advised the main committee on specific areas of space
science.
67. Space Science Board, "Report of
Ad Hoc Committee on Lunar Sample Handling Facility," Feb. 2, 1965.
68. King interview.
69. OSSA Ad Hoc Committee on the Lunar
Sample Receiving Laboratory, "Concepts . . . for the Lunar Sample
Receiving Laboratory," Mar. 15, 1965, p. 80.
70. McLane to Mgr., Systems Tests and
Evaluation, "Staffing for the Lunar Sample Receiving
Laboratory," Sept. 2, 1965.
71. Urner Liddell to Chmn., Space
Science Steering Committee, "Recommendations of Planetology
Subcommittee, Meeting 3-66, February 23-25, 1966," no date.
72. "Summary Minutes, Lunar
Receiving Laboratory Working Group of the Planetology Subcommittee,
Space Sciences Steering Committee (Meeting No. 1-66)," May 5, 1966.
73. McLane to Dir., Engineering and
Development, "Estimate of scientist staffing requirements for the
Lunar Receiving Laboratory," May 25, 1966.
74. House Committee on Science and
Astronautics, 1968 NASA Authorization, hearings before the
Subcommittee on Manned Space Flight, 90/1, pt. 2, p. 599.
75. "Summary Minutes, Lunar
Receiving Laboratory Working Group of the Planetology Subcommittee,
Space Sciences Steering Committee (Meeting No. 1-67)," July 11,
1966.
76. Joseph R. Crump to Purser, with
encl., "Concerning a Contract for Lunar Receiving Laboratory,"
July 27, 1966.
77. Draft memo, Gilruth to Mueller,
"Procurement Plan for Operational Support Services Contract for the
Manned Spacecraft Center Lunar Receiving Laboratory," with encl.,
procurement plan, no date [c. Sept. 5, 1966].
78. Gilruth to Lt. Gen. Frank A. Bogart,
Oct. 12, 1966.
79. J. E. Riley to Mr. Cariski,
"MSC Procurement Plan for Operational Support of Lunar Receiving
Laboratory," Oct. 18, 1966; Bogart to Mr. Webb, "Meeting with
Dr. Seitz on the Lunar Receiving Laboratory," Nov. 7 , 1966;
Purser, "Lunar Receiving Laboratory Operations Planning," memo
for the record, Nov. 7, 1966; Robert O. Piland to Deputy Dir.,
"Lunar Receiving Laboratory," Nov. 8, 1966; Wesley L.
Hjornevik, TWX to Bogart, Dec. 15, 1966; Francis B. Smith to Webb and
Seamans, "December 1966 meeting to discuss plans for the Lunar
Receiving Laboratory," Dec. 19, 1966.
80. Smith to Webb and Seamans,
"December 1966 meeting . . . ," Dec. 19, 1966.
81. Willis M. Shapley to Mueller and
Newell, "Lunar Receiving Laboratory," Dec. 21, 1966.
82. "Summary Minutes, Lunar
Receiving Laboratory Working Group of the Planetology Subcommittee,
Space Science Steering Committee (Meeting No. 2-67)," Sept. 26-27,
1966; Lunar Receiving Laboratory Working Group to Newell through
Planetology Subcommittee, Sept. 29, 1966; Bogart to Low, Sept. 22, 1966;
"Minutes, Interagency Committee on Back Contamination," Oct.
3, 1966; David J. Sencer to Seamans, Nov. 14, 1966; G. Briggs Phillips
to Bogart, with encl., "Status Report on the Lunar Receiving
Laboratory," Dec. 13, 1966; Melvin Calvin to Newell, Dec. 29, 1966;
Richard J. Allenby to Assoc. Adm. for Space Science and Applications,
"Lunar Receiving Laboratory Problems," Dec. 29, 1966.
83. Hjornevik to Bogart, TWX, Dec. 15,
1966; MSC Announcement 67-7, "Organization and Personnel
Assignments for the Science and Applications Directorate," Jan. 10,
1967.
84. Low to Bogart, Jan. 13, 1967, with
encls.: Gilruth to Chief, Procurement and Contracts Div.,
"Justification (under NPC 401) for nonpersonal service contract for
operation of the Manned Spacecraft Center Lunar Receiving
Laboratory," Jan. 13, 1967; Piland to Chief, Procurement and
Contracts Div., "Justification for noncompetitive procurement for
operational support of the Lunar Receiving Laboratory," Jan. 13,
1967.
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