|
Images
Audio Clips
Video Clips
Movies
Documents
|
 |

PRIMARY MISSION ACCOMPLISHED: 1969
A Second Group of Scientist-Astronauts
George Mueller was making ambitious projections for the Apollo
Applications Program in 1966, and if they developed, more scientists
would be needed for its crews. In September 1966 the National Academy of
Sciences and NASA announced that applications for a second group of
scientist-astronauts would be accepted. [see
Chapter 5] Nearly a thousand hopefuls applied; the Academy's
selection committee forwarded 69 names to NASA in March 1967, and five
months later 11 new astronaut trainees, 9 Ph.D.s and 2 M.D.s, were
named. [see Appendix 6] The group
contained not a single qualified pilot; after six months of orientation
and basic "ground school" training at MSC, they would all be
sent to Air Force flight training.4
Addition of this class of candidates brought the astronaut corps to a
strength of 56 - more than Apollo seemed to need, since no more than 10
lunar missions were contemplated.*
The qualifications of the new group - who were mostly physicists,
astronomers, or physicians, not earth scientists - suggests that MSC was
preparing for Apollo Applications missions rather than lunar
exploration. When they were chosen in mid-1967, however, even that
prospect was growing dim and would be dimmer yet by the time they had
finished flight training. Headquarters program officials continued to
talk of frequent Apollo Applications missions,5 and Slayton had to be prepared to supply crews
for whatever missions should be assigned and to anticipate some degree
of attrition. On the other hand, if the program did not materialize as
planned, the astronaut corps would be overstaffed and many aspiring
space explorers would have small chance of flying in space. That could
be an especially touchy point with scientists, who risked their careers
by enlisting as astronauts.** In
interviews with the scientist applicants, Slayton tried not to raise
their expectations about the availability of flight assignments, to the
point of frankly admitting that the astronaut corps had no urgent need
for them at the moment. With that understanding, however, they were
welcome in Houston, because the astronaut corps needed all kinds of
talent to support MSC's missions.6
Members of the new group soon dubbed themselves "The Excess
Eleven," or "XSXI."
* Given Slayton's system of
promoting a backup crew to prime crew three missions later, and assuming
that no crewman would be assigned to more than one mission in any
capacity, 10 lunar missions would have required 55 astronauts (if
support crews later became backup and prime crews). Slayton's preference
for flight experience in crew members, however, makes that assumption
questionable; hence fewer astronauts could have filled the positions on
prime, backup, and support crews. On the 7 lunar landing missions flown,
39 astronauts filled 63 available crew positions.
** So did the pilot-astronauts, for
that matter, but provision was made for them to keep their professional
skills (flying) well honed as part of the program. The scientists
enjoyed no such concession, as was repeatedly pointed out by NASA's
outside scientific consultants.
4. NASA Release 67-211, Aug. 4, 1967.
5. W. David Compton and Charles D.
Benson, Living and Working in Space: A History of Skylab,
NASA SP-4208 (Washington, 1983), pp. 84-86.
6. Interview with Donald K. Slayton, Oct.
15, 1984.
|