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SELECTING AND TRAINING THE CREWS
Headquarters Expands the Ranks of Scientist-Astronauts
In mid-1966, when the scientist-astronauts had completed their flying
training and the third group of pilots had reported aboard, the
astronaut corps numbered 44 pilots*
and 5 scientists (or 41 and 8, depending on how Cunningham, Schweickart,
and Lind were classified) - a ratio that hardly supported the contention
that NASA was interested in sending scientists into space. At the Manned
Spacecraft Center, Deke Slayton and Bob Gilruth considered that they had
quite enough pilots to carry out the programs they could realistically
envision and that pilots could be trained to conduct the scientific work
that was planned for the lunar landing missions. At Headquarters,
however, both Homer Newel! in the Office of Space Science and
Applications and George Mueller in the Office of Manned Space Flight
thought otherwise. Newell, representing the science community, wanted
manned space flight to give more attention to science and less to the
engineering and piloting aspects of space flight. Mueller, trying hard
to sell an ambitious program of post-Apollo manned missions based
largely on scientific research in space, could use more scientists in
the astronaut corps to give credibility to his appeals to Congress and
to gain political support from scientists outside NASA.
In spite of Houston's reluctance to take on astronaut trainees who would
have little expectation of flying in space, Headquarters and the
National Academy of Sciences announced on September 26, 1966, that
applications would be accepted for a second group of scientists to be
trained as astronauts. Selection would be made in about six months.52 By the time they came aboard, however,
post-Apollo manned space flight programs were in a precarious position
and the future looked much less bright [see
Chapter 7]. The chances seemed good that any scientist who went
to the moon would be one of the first five already in the program.
* Three astronaut trainees had been
killed in flying accidents in the previous two years. Ted Freeman's T-38
hit a goose near MSC on Oct. 31, 1964, causing both engines to flame
out; he ejected but was too low for his parachute to open. Elliott See
and Charles Bassett, prime crew for Gemini IX, crashed on Feb. 28, 1966,
after missing a landing approach at St. Louis Municipal Airport under
marginal weather conditions.
52. "Scientists Invited to Become
Astronauts, Do Research in Space," NASA Release 66-255, Sept. 26,
1966.
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