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MISSION AND SCIENCE PLANNING
MSC Develops a Science Organization
Mercury project engineers at MSC had reluctantly allowed a few
scientific exercises to ride their spacecraft, but this patched-on
effort was of small importance. To pave the way for worthwhile
experiments in manned space flight, Homer Newell persisted in urging
scientists to devise experiments that would take advantage of man's
presence. By the time Gemini was fully operational in early 1965 a fair
number of scientific exercises had been proposed and accepted for
flight.47 After Mercury, the Manned
Spacecraft Center established an Experiments Coordinating Office to
ensure that science plans were compatible with the spacecraft and the
operational constraints of the mission.48 Within the Gemini Program Office a Gemini
Experiments Office supervised the science exercises undertaken in
Gemini.
As the Apollo science program evolved in 1964-65, the horizon of manned
space science expanded to include lunar surface experiments as well as
in-flight (earth-and lunar-orbital) science. In view of its new
responsibility to oversee the development and integration of the Apollo
experiments as well as integrating the Gemini science, the Houston
center decided to centralize the management of all manned space flight
experiments in a single office. In June 1965 MSC Director Robert R.
Gilruth appointed Robert O. Piland to head a new Experiments Program
Office within the Engineering and Development Directorate.49 Piland, formerly a research scientist at
Langley, had served briefly on the staff of James R. Killian, President
Eisenhower's science advisor, before joining the Manned Spacecraft
Center in 1959. After contributing to the early planning and study
efforts that led to the Apollo spacecraft program, he was appointed
deputy manager of MSC's Apollo Spacecraft Program Office in 1962. His
new office absorbed the staff and functions of both the Gemini
Experiments Office and the Experiments Coordination Office and
immediately took over work on the ALSEP contracts.
Piland's job was to keep track of the complex requirements of the Apollo
spacecraft and mission plans and see that the experimenters understood
those requirements and adhered to them. His responsibilities extended
from the conception of the experiment to the management and distribution
of data. The Experiments Program Office worked with spacecraft
engineers, flight planners, scientific investigators, and contractors in
developing, testing, and integrating the experiments into the
missions.50
The in-flight experiments were an important part of Apollo lunar
science, but MSC's involvement with science was growing in other phases
of the program as well. During 1965 the Houston center was developing
the concept of the lunar receiving laboratory, which went into NASA's
budget proposal for fiscal 1966. [see Chapter
4] When Apollo began to return samples of lunar material to the
earth, MSC's relations with the outside scientific community would
expand considerably. Those samples were of incalculable scientific
value, and scientists would assuredly demand a say in how they were
handled from the time they were collected on the moon to the time they
were parceled out to investigators. Apollo was about to create a
relationship between MSC and the scientific world that was new to both
groups and would require careful handling.
There is not much room for doubt that MSC considered itself perfectly
competent to manage the lunar samples with minimal help from the
outside; the science community could simply lay out its requirements and
MSC, if it concurred, would do the rest. Scientists, however, would
never agree to stand in line at MSC's dispensing window to receive their
designated allotments of lunar material. The deliberations of the
various advisory groups and ad hoc committees convened to define the
lunar receiving laboratory make it plain that scientists saw the proper
staffing of the LRL as one of the most important questions of the entire
project. At the very least they would insist that a scientist of
considerable repute be appointed to head the laboratory and take charge
of the sample analysis program, with the advice and consent of the
scientific community.
Besides the anticipated lunar science program, MSC had to recognize
George Mueller's increasing interest in a science-oriented post-Apollo
program. Having established an Apollo Applications Program (AAP) office
in August 1965, Mueller went to Congress the following spring to seek
funding for it.51 If he should get what
he was asking for, AAP would bring science to the forefront of manned
space flight; although MSC lacked the staff to support it (concurrently
with its Gemini and Apollo commitments) at the time, science clearly had
to have a place in Houston - otherwise MSC might find itself playing a
support role to some other center. At the end of March Faget announced
the establishment of a Space Science Office within his Engineering and
Development Directorate, described as an "interim arrangement
pending development of a permanent scientific organization." For
this purpose MSC regrouped a number of scattered center activities
around Piland's Experiments Program Office and under his direction.
While most of those activities were conducted in support of manned space
flight operations and lunar exploration, the Space Science Office was
also charged with developing, monitoring, and coordinating experiments
for all manned space missions involving science.52
The following week Gilruth sent MSC's plan for a more extensive
reorganization to George Mueller. A new Space Medicine Directorate would
consolidate all center medical activities in a single organization. For
science, a new Space Science Division was to be established - not a
science directorate on the same level as Space Medicine or Engineering
and Development, but an upgraded version of the Space Science Office
just established, still under Faget's jurisdiction. The proposal more
specifically included management of the lunar receiving laboratory,
providing MSC's point of contact with the external scientific community,
and giving MSC scientists the opportunity to generate their own
experiments. Some 76 people from other offices would comprise the new
division, and a scientist would be recruited to head it as soon as
possible. Agreeing with Newell's view that the division should
concentrate primarily on one scientific field, Gilruth suggested that
lunar and earth sciences would be its most appropriate disciplines.53 For the next several months
Headquarters and MSC discussed the proposed reorganization and the
question of a director for science at MSC.54
While those discussions were going on, Headquarters was working to
clarify agency-wide management responsibilities for future manned flight
activities. Apollo Applications, emerging as the most likely successor
to Apollo, embraced a much greater variety of scientific projects than
Apollo and appeared to require more interlocking of effort among the
field centers (chiefly MSC and Marshall Space Flight Center) as well as
Headquarters program offices. Accordingly, on July 26 Deputy
Administrator Robert C. Seamans divided responsibility for prospective
programs among the various entities - in effect ratifying the
arrangement Homer Newell and George Mueller had been working under since
1963. [see Chapter 3] Mueller's Office
of Manned Space Flight was to be responsible for the conduct of Apollo
and AAP missions, developing and funding the experiments that were
selected by Newell's Office of Space Science and Applications. Seamans
went one step further, assigning to each center primary responsibility
for specific areas: Marshall to develop the Apollo telescope mount (a
major component of Apollo Applications), Goddard to handle atmospheric
science, meteorology, and astronomical experiments, and MSC to manage
the Apollo lunar surface experiments package, lunar science, earth
resources, and life-support systems. Future assignments would depend on
center capabilities and NASA's long-range plans.55
In November, "in response to the growing significance and
responsibilities of the Center in the area of science and
applications," Houston informed Headquarters that it proposed to
create a Science and Applications Directorate, on the same
organizational level as those for Engineering and Development and
Medical Research and Operations. (At long last Homer Newell's view of
the importance of science at MSC prevailed.) It would subsume the
functions of Space Science Division and would collect all space- and
lunar-science-related functions of the center, along with the many
people scattered throughout the center who were then engaged in
scientific work in support of Apollo. The directorate would be
responsible for planning and conducting all MSC programs in space
science and applications and would be the center's point of contact with
the scientific world outside. Pending appointment of a permanent
director, Bob Piland, named as deputy director, would run the
operation.56 Administrator James Webb
approved the new MSC organization on December 23, 1966.57
After several months of searching, Gilruth announced on February 17,
1967, selection of a director of science and applications: Wilmot N.
Hess, chief of the Laboratory for Theoretical Studies at Goddard Space
Flight Center. Hess was a nationally recognized scientist whose major
scientific interest was high-energy nuclear physics and space radiation
studies.58 A space physicist seemed a
curious choice in view of the scientific responsibilities foreseen for
the center, but Hess was considered to be a competent administrator, and
he had the scientific stature to give credibility to Houston's
scientific efforts.
47. Barton C. Hacker and James M.
Grimwood, On The Shoulders of Titans: A History of Project
Gemini, NASA SP-4203 (Washington, 1977), pp. 229-31; see
Gemini Midprogram Conference Including Experimental
Results, NASA SP-121 (Washington, 1966), pp.305-436, and
Gemini Summary Conference, NASA SP-138 (Washington, 1967),
pp. 221-317, for summaries of the Gemini experiments program and its
results.
48. See W. David Compton and Charles D.
Benson, Living and Working in Space: A History of Skylab,
NASA SP-4208 (Washington, 1983), pp. 59-63, for pre-Apollo experience
with scientific experiments.
49. MSC Announcement 65-81,
"Designation of Manager, Experiments, in E&D, and Establishment
of the Experiments Program Office," June 21, 1965.
50. Ibid.
51. Compton and Benson, Living and
Working in Space, pp. 40-52.
52. Maxime A. Faget to multiple
addressees, "Establishment of a Space Science Office within
E&D," Mar. 31, 1966.
53. Gilruth to Mueller, "Change in
the basic MSC organization," Apr. 4, 1966.
54. D. M. Allison, "Summary
Minutes: Planetology Subcommittee of the Space Science Steering
Committee (Meeting No. 1-67), 26, 27, 28 July 1966," no date.
55. Robert C. Seamans to Hqs. Assoc.
Administrators, "Management Responsibilities for Future Manned
Flight Activities," July 26, 1966; see also Compton and Benson,
Living and Working in Space, pp. 48-52.
56. George M. Low to multiple
addressees, "Pending MSC Organizational Change," Nov. 17,
1966.
57. Mueller to Gilruth, Jan. 17, 1967,
with encls., MSC Organization Chart approved by Webb and functional
statement for MSC Director of Science and Applications.
58. MSC Announcement 67-27,
"Director, Science and Applications Directorate," Feb. 17,
1967.
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