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SETBACK AND RECOVERY: 1967
Lunar Receiving Laboratory:
At the end of 1966 construction of the Lunar Receiving Laboratory (LRL )
at MSC was well under way. On January 11, 1967, Gilruth advised Homer
Newell that the laboratory's design was essentially fixed and that any
new requirements arising out of proposals by scientific investigators
could only be accommodated by design changes, which would cost money and
time.46 Construction proceeded without
significant delay throughout the spring, and in mid-April program
manager Joseph V. Piland reported to Gilruth that he expected to close
down his office by June 30 and turn the laboratory over to its operating
staff.47
The principal unsettled question in early 1967 was that of a laboratory
staff. For several months the LRL Working Group, appointed by the
Planetology Subcommittee of OSSA's Space Sciences Steering Committee,
had insisted that the laboratory must be a permanent scientific research
organization headed by a nationally respected scientist who would report
to the director of MSC. [see Chapter
4] MSC's announcement creating the new Science and Applications
Directorate did not mention the Lunar Receiving Laboratory, confirming
the "worst fears" (as the group's chairman, Clark Goodman, put
it) of the working group, which was informed of the action only after
the fact. Headquarters and MSC officials spent considerable time
convincing Goodman that those fears were groundless: the laboratory
would be a part of MSC's science directorate and MSC was working closely
with OSSA in selecting an outstanding scientist to direct it; the
director would be appointed only with the concurrence of the associate
administrator for space science and applications; and he would be given
a free hand in revising the organization of the laboratory and selecting
its staff.48 Three days after
announcing the new science directorate, MSC issued an interim plan for
the management and operation of the Lunar Receiving Laboratory, placing
it in the Lunar and Earth Sciences Division, whose head would report to
the Director of Science and Applications.49
In the weeks following the establishment of the science directorate at
MSC, it seemed that every group having a claim on the functions of the
receiving laboratory wanted immediate action on its primary problems.
After the LRL Working Group it was the Planetary Biology Subcommittee of
the Space Sciences Steering Committee, which met in Houston in
mid-January to look after the life sciences' interests in lunar samples
and the biological training of astronauts. Some investigators suspected
that MSC intended to enlarge the receiving laboratory's activities to
the point of usurping some of the responsibilities of outside
scientists; but Houston's presentation to the subcommittee evidently
laid that fear to rest.50 The following
week it was the Public Health Service, which was concerned with
back-contamination and quarantine. MSC Deputy Director George Low and
PHS officials met at Atlanta and agreed that the chief of the Biomedical
Branch, one of five branches under the Lunar and Earth Sciences Division
of the receiving laboratory, would oversee quarantine. When the lab was
completed and a formal organization was in place, MSC would recommend
appointment of Dr. G. Briggs Phillips, the PHS's liaison officer at MSC
since mid-1965, to that post.51
Scientific activity in the receiving laboratory came to the fore in the
spring of 1967 when the scientists who would investigate the first
material returned to earth from the moon were named. On March 16,
Headquarters announced that 110 scientists, including 27 working in
laboratories outside the United States, had been selected to receive
lunar samples.52 The Manned Spacecraft
Center then faced the task of allocating the lunar material to these
investigators, considering the type and quantity of sample each one
wanted. Before the selection was announced, MSC had asked Headquarters
for a list of each experimenter's special requirements. OSSA returned
the question to Houston to be settled in face-to- face discussions
between MSC and the scientists. Newell suggested that the principal
investigators be called together to consider these problems and that
they themselves should take much of the responsibility for allocating
samples. Headquarters would cooperate in every possible way, but
basically it was leaving the management of the lunar investigations to
MSC.53
In September MSC convened a three-day meeting of the investigators to
allow them to update their proposals, revise their budget estimates, and
devise an equitable plan for sample allocation. Wilmot Hess and his
staff briefed the scientists on the general guidelines expected to
govern the distribution of samples and the publication of results, and
reviewed the general requirements for managing contracts and grants. In
revising their proposals and funding requests, the scientists were not
allowed to make any major changes in experiment plans but were
encouraged to make small ones if that would significantly improve their
investigations. In November MSC forwarded to Headquarters its revised
budget estimates for support of lunar investigations: $3.556 million for
fiscal 1968, down from the previously estimated $4.135 million, and
$3.759 million for fiscal 1969, reduced from $4.592 million.54
From the scientists' point of view an equally important result of the
September conference was the creation of two teams of scientists to
participate in the early phases of sample examination. With the help of
the investigators, Hess organized a lunar sample analysis planning
team* to assist him in formulating
detailed guidelines for the selection and allocation of samples and the
necessary scientific functions in the receiving laboratory. A second
group, the lunar sample preliminary examination team,** would participate in the initial
examination of samples in the LRL. Besides investigators approved to
perform experiments in the laboratory during quarantine, the latter
group included a mineralogy-petrology team who would help obtain
information that would be used in allocating samples to other
investigators. These appointments did much to increase the confidence of
the scientists in MSC's plans for management of the samples.55
The last gap in LRL management was closed with the appointment of a
director for the laboratory. On August 1, 1967, P. R. Bell, senior
physicist at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, assumed duties as Chief
of MSC's Lunar and Earth Sciences Division and director of the LRL.
Bell's career extended from pre-World War II work with the National
Defense Research Committee at the University of Chicago through wartime
research at MIT's Radiation Laboratory to postwar work at Oak Ridge. An
expert in instrumentation, he had conceived the vacuum system that was
being built by Union Carbide at Oak Ridge to be installed in the
receiving laboratory.56
* Members initially appointed were
Wilmot N. Hess, MSC, chairman; Elbert A. King, MSC, secretary; Edward
Anders, Univ. of Chicago; James R. Arnold, Univ. of California, San
Diego; P. R. Bell, LRL manager, MSC; Clifford Frondel, Harvard Univ.;
Paul W. Gast, Lamont Geol. Observatory, Columbia Univ.; Harry H. Hess,
Princeton Univ.; J. Hoover Mackin, Univ. of Texas; Eugene M. Shoemaker,
U.S. Geological Survey; M. Gene Simmons, Mass. Inst. of Technology;
Brian J. Skinner, Yale Univ.; Wolf Vishniac, Univ. of Rochester; and
Gerald J. Wasserburg, Calif. Inst. of Technology.
** Members initially appointed were
Wilmot N. Hess, MSC, chairman; Klaus Biemann, Mass. Inst. of Technology;
Almo L. Burlingame, Univ. of California, Berkeley; Edward C. T. Chao,
U.S. Geological Survey; Clifford Frondel, Harvard Univ.; Elbert A. King,
MSC; J. Hoover Mackin, Univ. of Texas; G. Davis O'Kelley, Oak Ridge
National Laboratory; Oliver A. Schaeffer, State Univ. of New York, Stony
Brook; and M. Gene Simmons, Mass. Inst. of Technology.
46. Gilruth to Newell, "Principal
Investigator requirements for the Lunar Receiving Laboratory
(LRL)," Jan. 11, 1967.
47. Joseph V. Piland, "Lunar
Receiving Laboratory Bi-weekly Status Reports," Jan. 9, Jan. 23,
Feb. 6, Feb. 20, Mar. 6, Mar. 20, Apr. 3, Apr. 17, 1967; Piland to Dir.,
MSC, "Phase-out of Lunar Receiving Laboratory Program Office,"
Apr. 14, 1967.
48. Clark Goodman to members of LRL
Working Group, "Science and Applications Directorate at MSC,"
no date [c. Jan. 14, 1967].
49. MSC Announcements no. 67-7,
"Organization and Personnel Assignments for the Science and
Applications Directorate," Jan. 10, 1967, and 67-4, "Interim
Plan for the Management and Operation of the Lunar Receiving
Laboratory," Jan. 13, 1967.
50. Melvin Calvin to Newell, Dec. 29,
1966; Paul E. Purser to Deputy Dir., MSC, "Planetary Biology
Subcommittee Meeting at MSC on January 10-11, 1967," Jan. 17, 1967.
51. George M. Low, "Resume of
Meeting of January 16, 1967, at the Communicable Disease Center,
Atlanta, Georgia," Jan. 16, 1967.
52. "First Lunar Samples Set for
Experiment by 110 Scientists," Hqs. Release 67-55, Mar. 16, 1967.
53. Low to John E. Naugle, Mar. 9, 1967;
Newell to MSC, "Lunar Sample Analysis Planning," June 16,
1967.
54. Gilruth to John E. Naugle,
"Lunar Sample Analysis Planning," Nov. 15, 1967.
55. Ibid.
56. MSC Announcement 67-140,
"Designation of Chief, Lunar and Earth Sciences Division,"
Oct. 11, 1967.
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