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ENTY-FIVE CENTS FEBRUARY 17, 1958 TIME THE WEEKLY NEWSMAGA NE Biris Chaliapin MISSILEMAN VON BRAUN 3850 2222 10 33100 or 30 & $7.00 3650 TUNLAW RD-AP 105 REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.) IND Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum "I SSIN VOL. LXXI NO.7 850 FOREIGN RELATIONS defense of the free world must work by SPACE cooperation when confronted by a mono- Toward the Summit lith of force and power SO great as the Reach for the Stars In a shuffle of letters to Western chiefs strength of the Communist area We (See Cover) of government and cocktail-party com- must not make a unilateral proposal that Shirtsleeved, tousled, and bright-eyed ments to Western diplomats, the Kremlin we go out, or that we demilitarize all with the dream that gave Germany its has been working hard to spread the no- Central Europe." V-2 and the U.S. its first orbiting satellite, tion that a parley at the summit is inevita- Moscow Reacts. In sum, the basic U.S. bull-shouldered Wernher von Braun paced ble-on the Kremlin's terms. Newsmen in position for the start of any negotiations the yellow-walled office in Building 4488, Europe and Washington have helped the was just about as President Eisenhower nerve center of the Army Ballistic Mis- notion along by reporting surges of what had outlined it in his letter to Bulganin sile Agency at Huntsville, Ala. Already on was called "world opinion" in favor of a three weeks before (TIME, Jan. 20): I) re- his cluttered mahogany desk last week parley to "end" the cold war. When the unification of Germany by free elections was a new satellite assignment: preparing U.S., anxious not to repeat the letdown of -promised by Russia at the I955 sum- a Jupiter-C to power Explorer II into 1955's spirit of Geneva, insisted that mit conference, 2) permission for the Red space late this month. More work was on points at issue be explored at the foreign minister or ambassadorial level before any summit meeting, the Kremlin set about making mileage with the appeasement- minded by charging that the U.S. "atti- tude on peace" was "negative." But one day last week the U.S.S.R.'s Bulganin, in his third letter to President Eisenhower in two months, went more than a step too far. In a too-obvious at- tempt to discredit Secretary of State Dul- les, Bulganin suggested bypassing a meet- ing of foreign ministers in the preparations for the summit because of the "biased position" of some foreign ministers. Said Bulganin: "It is hardly necessary to ex- plain why we would like to avoid this." At once U.S. Congressmen and editorial writers began to rally around Dulles with a rare show of strength that fortified the whole U.S. position. Down with Rapacki. From the floor of the Senate, Dulles got more praise than he has heard in months. New Hampshire's Republican Styles Bridges, bitter critic of Dulles on foreign aid, called him "the most principled and resolved statesman of the West." Montana Democrat Mike Mansfield, who needled Dulles unmerci- Associated Press fully during last year's great debate on RUSSIA'S MENSHIKOV (RIGHT) & WIFE BEING WELCOMED TO THE U.S.* the Eisenhower Doctrine, now reminded Smiles at the ambassadorial level. the Kremlin that Dulles is "the Secretary of State of the United States of America." satellites to have freedom to choose their the way; called by the telecommunica- At his weekly press conference the Presi- own governments, 3) suspension of nu- tions room, Space Engineer von Braun dent, questioned on Bulganin's crack about clear-weapons tests along with foolproof hurried down the hall, talked to Defense biased foreign ministers, got a laugh when suspension of the production of nuclear Department Missile Director William he cracked right back that the Kremlin weapons, 4) outer space for peaceful pur- Holaday in Washington, turned to an aide "must have been talking about Foreign poses. And as for the roots of the struggle, with the heady news that two more Hunts- Minister Gromyko." Dulles even contributed to a debate start- ville rocket projects had been approved The White House disposed of Bulga- ed by the British left-wing New States- ("O.K. on No. 8 and No. 10"). Back in nin's latest letter with a request for "fur- man by reminding soft-liners everywhere his office, Von Braun flopped into a chair ther clarification." The State Department, that, but for the use of force and violence, behind a huge pile of congratulatory mes- addressing itself to the much-discussed "Communist parties could not exercise sages, found just a moment to reflect on let's-neutralize-Central-Europe proposals power anywhere in the world." the fantastic rush of events. "Oh, to be of Poland's Foreign Minister Adam Ra- All this did not mean that there would in space this week," he grinned. "It's SO packi-since endorsed by the Kremlin as be no summit conference; in fact some quiet up there." a suitable topic for the summit-warned Washington reporters were assuming that It was anything but quiet on Planet all U.S. diplomatic missions overseas that a conference was a foregone conclusion. Earth. Under the impetus of the satellite such a plan is "extremely dangerous." What it did mean was that the U.S. was Explorer's fiery success came the first fed- Added the President at his press confer- stating its minimum terms for approach- eral space agency, the Senate's first space ence, in a definitive statement of policy ing such a conference. Moscow responded committee, the first Democratic and Re- on such neutralize-Europe agreements: in two interesting ways: I) by sending publican attempts to stake political claims "Free nations, of which we are only to Washington a smiling new ambassa- on space-and a full-throttle U.S. Army one-and though we may be the strongest, dor, Mikhail Alekseyvich Menshikov, 55, drive to exploit its satellite success after we are simply another equal among equals who lost no time in paying a friendly months of telling itself that it was the -cannot make decisions respecting other call on Secretary Dulles, and 2) at week's Pentagon's stepchild. Army brass marched free nations unilaterally or bilaterally with end by a terse broadcast on Radio Mos- with a color guard into a Capitol Hill the Soviets. There has got to be an agree- cow: "We can but admit that the idea hearing room to present a new service ment in which the affected countries must of adequate preparations for a summit be participants We have established conference advanced by U.S. leaders is At Baltimore's Friendship Airport, by State the NATO association realizing that the correct." Department Protocol Chief Wiley Buchanan. TIME, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 21 Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum U.S. Almy by Walter Dornberger © 1954, Viking Press Deutsche Gesellschaft für Raketentechnik und Raumfahrt E.V. PEENEMÜNDE INSPECTION* V-2 SURRENDER TO AMERICANS* His only consuming loyalty is to outer space. flag to the House Military Appropriations scientist and public-relations man"). Oth- fortable Oberaudorf apartment, Baron Subcommittee. Patrols of Army public- ers claim that the onetime boy wonder of Magnus von Braun, tanned and vigorous, relations officers prowled Pentagon corri- rocketry has become too conservative, celebrated his 80th birthday, marked by dors, passing out word that, given the e.g., a West Coast rocketeer says that a four-page letter from Wernher and a chance, the Army could develop a rocket Von Braun is wary of unproved new ideas, gift of twelve bottles of Rhine wine. Said motor to put a 15-ton satellite into space no matter how promising, and that he he, fingering his white walrus mustache with a man aboard. The Air Force stood "still takes the conventional view that we in wonderment-now mixed with pride- that sort of talk as long as it could, then should go into space with chemical rock- at his son's strange fascination with space: leaked a story about using its Thor ets, with overgrown missiles of conven- "I don't know where his talent comes intermediate-range ballistic missile to put tional design." To this, Wernher von from." up a 1,000-lb. satellite as early as June. Braun pleads guilty. "The more you're in Unquestionably, much of it came from The Army promptly upped the ante to this business," he says, "the more con- Wernher's mother, an enthusiastic ama- 1,500 lbs.-and the Pentagon's interserv- servative you get. I've been in it long teur astronomer ("Odd," says Wernher ice storm signals were flapping furiously. enough to be very conservative, to want von Braun, "but few mothers are"), who A Broomstick Would Do. Yet for all to improve what we've got rather than pointed out to him the planets and con- the rivalry, hard-working servicemen and begin by building what we haven't." So stellations in Prussia's clear night skies. civilian specialists along the whole broad long as the frontiers of space are broken, "For my confirmation," says Wernher von front of U.S. missilery felt a new near- Wernher von Braun does not care how; Braun, "I didn't get a watch and my first ness to space as Explorer radioed back its he would happily ride a broomstick into pair of long pants, like most Lutheran readings (see SCIENCE). And of the le- the heavens. boys. I got a telescope. My mother gions of scientists, generals, admirals, en- Says Germany's veteran Rocketeer Rolf thought it would make the best gift." gineers and administrators at work on Engel, who has known Von Braun since Blood on the Walls. Reading an astron- missiles and man-made moons, German- 1928: "He is a human leader whose eyes omy pamphlet in the mid-1920s, Von born Wernher von Braun, 45, best per- and thoughts have always been turned to- Braun saw a drawing of a rocket streaking sonified man's accelerating drive to rise ward the stars. It would be foolish to through space to the moon. It illustrated above the planet. Von Braun, in fact, has assign rocketry success to one person to- an article about Pioneer Rocket Theorist only one interest: the conquest of space, tally. Components must necessarily be the Hermann Oberth, now 63 and a consult- which he calls man's greatest venture. To work of many minds; so must successive ant to Von Braun's Huntsville team, pursue his lifelong dream, he has helped stages of development. But because Wern- which venerates him as "The Old Gentle- Adolf Hitler wage a vengeful new kind of her von Braun joins technical ability, pas- man." Von Braun sent away for a copy war, has argued against bureaucracy in sionate optimism, immense experience and of Oberth's classic book, The Rocket to two languages and campaigned against uncanny organizing ability in the elusive the Interplanetary Spaces, was shocked official apathy and public disbelief on two power to create a team, he is the greatest to discover that it contained mostly math- continents through most of his adult years. human element behind today's rocketry ematical equations. Until then, Von Braun A robust (5 ft. II in., 185 lbs.), hearty success." had disliked math, and indeed had flunked man with a booming laugh and a frank Mother Knew Best. Von Braun's ori- it in school. "But," says Von Braun, "I manner, he can be both ruthless and de- gins had deep earthly roots in Prussian decided that if I had to know about math vious in his striving for space. To some, Junkerdom. A Von Braun fought the Mon- to learn about space travel and rocketry, Von Braun's transfer of loyalty from Nazi gols at Liegnitz in I245, and the family's then I'd have to learn math." He did just Germany to the U.S. seemed to come too aristocracy was certified by the centuries. that, wound up teaching physics and math fast, too easy. Von Braun's critics say he Wernher was born in Wirsitz, East Prus- to his fellow students at a boarding school is more salesman than scientist; actually, sia (now part of Poland), the middle son on an island in the North Sea when the he learned through the bitterest experi- of Baron Magnus von Braun, the local teacher fell ill. ence that his space dreams had to be sold state administrator. Today Wernher's old- Rocketeer Oberth's work had inspired ("I have to be a two-headed monster- er brother, Sigismund, is counselor at the many another young German rocket bug, German embassy in London; his younger most of them flirting dangerously with de- * At left, Grand Admiral Karl Doenitz; head brother, Magnus, is program-control man- turned, Dornberger; in mufti, Von Braun. In ager of the Chrysler Corp.'s new missile * At left, Magnus von Braun and Dornberger; background: V-2 fins. division in Detroit. Last week in a com- arm in cast, Wernher von Braun. 22 TIME, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum struction as they pursued their untried hobby. Von Braun joined a small group HUNTSVILLE firing rockets from an abandoned ammu- Sauerkrauf nition dump in suburban Berlin. When he Hill left for a term at Zurich's Institute of "ROCKET CITY, U.S.A." Russe Erskine Hotel Technology, he continued his experiments, Missile School built a contraption that spun mice in sim- ulation of rocket take-offs. Afterward, his HUNTSVILLE, ALA. (610-636 alt., Court Monte est. 55,000 pop.), Madison Co. seat; 5 mi. house Sano roommate, an American medical student, dissected the mice, announced to Von from U.S. Army's Redstone Arsenal, Bal- Army Braun that the high acceleration caused listic Missile Agency, Ordnance Guided Airport City-County A.B.M.AX Airport cerebral hemorrhages. Their landlady had Missile School; 2 R.R. lines (Southern Missile Tests another kind of announcement: any more Ry., Louisville and Nashville R.R.); 2 air- Motel Row mouse blood on her walls, and the young lines (8 flts. out dly., incl. drct. sruce. to REDSTONE 231 scientists would go out on their ears. N.Y., Wash., Chi., Atlanta, Miami); Ac- ARSENAL Techniques of Flimflam. Von Braun coms.: 3 hotels, 21 motels; Local bus returned in 1931 to his little Berlin group, fare: 10¢; Swim: muncpl. pools; Fish: joyously helped launch 85 primitive rock- Tenn. River; Yrly. evnts.: Catholic Festi- ets. As it happened, the German army was val (Aug.), CO. fair (Sept.); I-hr. pkng. Tennessee lmt. dwntwn.; Auge. temp.: 74.6 deg. 01 then looking for some sort of long-range 3 5 weapons not banned by the Versailles summer, 50 deg. winter. TIME Map by R.M.C., Treaty-and it seemed just barely pos- sible that rockets might be the answer. Yesterday. Huntsville, on rich bot- was $10,767,000 (not including the $20 Captain Walter Dornberger, a boss of the tomland along the Tennessee River million building program at Redstone embryonic program, watched some of Von 90 miles north of Birmingham, with itself). Memorial Parkway, a new four- Braun's rocket shoots and was impressed high hills to the east and west (Wern- lane stretch of U.S. 231, is lined with "by the energy and shrewdness with which her von Braun lives on one of them, housing developments, more than a this tall, fair young student with the which has been dubbed Sauerkraut dozen modern motels, a $3,000,000 broad, massive chin went to work, and Hill, and is building a home on the shopping plaza (with a delicatessen by his astonishing theoretical knowledge." highest, Monte Sano), was founded in featuring Wiener schnitzel), and two Result: in October 1932, Wernher von 1805 by John Hunt, a Revolutionary new schools. A pride of the community Braun, at 20, became the top civilian spe- War militia captain. It was Alabama's is the new 55-piece Huntsville Civic cialist for the German army's new (and first incorporated town (1811), with Orchestra-with Werner Kuers, one of only) rocket station at Kummersdorf, the first incorporated bank (1816), site Von Braun's old German rocket hands, hidden in a pine forest south of Berlin. of the state's first constitutional con- as concertmaster. "Our aim from the beginning," says vention (1819); from Confederate Tomorrow. Huntsville's future ob- Walter Dornberger, now technical assist- War Secretary Leroy Pope Walker in viously depends on Army missile for- ant to the president of Bell Aircraft in Huntsville came the 1861 order to fire tunes-and after Explorer, the hopes Buffalo, "was to reach infinite space." on Fort Sumter. For years, Madison of self-styled "Rocket City, U.S.A." But if Wernher von Braun had any no- County was Alabama's top cotton pro- shot sky high. Under able, rough-talk- tions about the German army's spending ducer (80,000 bales in 1948) and ing Mayor R. B. ("Spec") Searcy, millions to achieve his dream of space Huntsville, with nine mills, lived on Huntsville has done a good job of exploration, they were quickly dispelled. King Cotton. The Depression almost meeting the demands imposed by its Germany wanted weapons, period. The left one-industry Huntsville a ghost boom. With pupil enrollment expand- Budget Bureau would not even permit town. Says a longtime resident: "If ing by I,200 a year, Huntsville last Kummersdorf to buy office equipment, you could stand on the courthouse week opened a million-dollar junior and Von Braun learned early in the game steps with as much as a dollar in your high school, plans to open two more the techniques of flimflamming the bu- pocket, you were the richest man in schools in September, has three others reaucrats, e.g., it was a rare budget official town." Huntsville's big boom began in on the drawing boards. (Because of the who realized that Kummersdorf's request 1950, when Wernher von Braun & Co. heavy load of Redstone children, the for funds to buy an "appliance for mill- arrived to start making Army missiles U.S. provides federal aid to schools- ing wooden dowels up to IO millimeters at Redstone Arsenal, a World War II $1,000,000 in 1957.) Says School Su- in diameter" meant that the rocketmen shell-loading installation that had been perintendent Raymond Christian: "So needed a pencil sharpener. Years later, taken out of commission in 1946. far we haven't had to double-shift. Let during the darkest days of the U.S. Today. Sleepy Huntsville, "the wa- 'em come. We'll be ready." Bonds for Army's missile program, Wernher von ter cress capital of the world," came a $4,000,000 sewage disposal plant Braun was to put such Kummersdorf ex- alive almost overnight; its easy South- went on the market last week. The perience to historic use. ern cadences intermixed with the get- Huntsville Housing Authority has built Despite its difficulties, by 1935 the it-done twang of Yankee technicians 620 low-rent housing units, has 539 Kummersdorf group had successfully fired and the business-first guttural of the more in the final planning stage, will two liquid-fuel rockets, christened Max German scientists. Although only one have three urban renewal projects un- and Moritz (the German cartoon equiva- of the cotton mills now remains in derway by midyear. The Albert Pick 'ents of the Katzenjammer Kids), and operation, Huntsville thrives as never Hotels chain plans a 250-room motel had outgrown the Kummersdorf facilities, before on an $81-million-a-year Army with a banquet room for 400 people, moved on to a new range at desolate, payroll. Where once Huntsville ex- and the Chrysler Corp. and other marshy Peenemünde, on the Baltic Coast. tended a mile in each direction from Redstone contractors plan expanded Adolf's Attention. At Peenemünde, its yellow brick courthouse, it now Huntsville field offices. When Explor- with its 250-mile rocket range, Germany's covers 40 square miles, with gra- er orbited, the daily-except-Saturday missiles went higher and higher, building cious antebellum homes, squalid Negro Huntsville Times put out a Saturday steps into space. That was fine for Von slums, and $15,000-per-unit develop- morning "Satellite Extra" with a I2O- Braun-but it was not yet the sort of ment homes for Redstone's 16,000 em- point streamer: JUPITER-C PUTS UP military hardware that Germany wanted. ployees. In 1950 there were 8,807 MOON. Huntsville hopes to ride just as World War II put on the pressure: Peene- telephones in Huntsville; now there high as that moon. Says Times Editor münde must either produce a devastating are 25,678. Building permits totaled Rees Amis: "I just don't see how we military weapon or get out of business. $2,500,000 in 1950; last year the total can do anything but grow and prosper." Peenemünde's answer was the A-4 (stand- TIME, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 23 Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum ing for Aggregate-4, but later named V-2, old V-2s, moved no closer to space. The develop the Army's Jupiter intermediate- for Vengeance Weapon Two, by Hitler's Korean war changed that: in 1950 the range ballistic missile as a competitor of gang). Its first test was a dismal flop. German scientists were rushed bag and the Air Force's Thor-and Von Braun So was the second. For Peenemünde, the baggage to Huntsville (see box) with said he needed test vehicles to iron out third test was do or die. On Oct. 3, 1942, orders to build the Army a long-range some of the problems. He wangled per- the A-4 soared supersonically to a his- missile with nuclear-payload capability. mission to build twelve Jupiter-Cs- tory-making height of nearly 60 miles, Result: the Redstone missile, successful- actually, almost the same jazzed-up Red- functioned perfectly. Peenemünde's men ly launched at Cape Canaveral in 1953. stones with which he had proposed to put danced and wept in their joy. Walter For the first time, Wernher von Braun's a small moon into orbit. Dornberger turned to Wernher von Braun. reach for the stars was accepted as more By Sept. 20, 1956, the first Jupiter-C "Do you realize what we accomplished science than science fiction. In the sum- was ready for firing at Cape Canaveral. today?" he asked. "Today the spaceship mer of 1954 Von Braun and a dozen It was a four-stage missile, with even a was born." other space enthusiasts from the services dummy fourth-stage satellite configura- The success ultimately won Hitler's and industry gathered in the Washington tion-just like the bird that last fort- personal attention, but Hitler's blessing office of Lieut. Commander George Hoo- night put Explorer into orbit. By this proved only a curse. Impossible produc- ver, U.S.N., to talk about launching a sat- time, Pentagon brass had a notion that tion schedules were set for the V-2, driv- ellite. Von Braun proposed to slam a 5-lb. Von Braun might be trying to beat the ing Von Braun to the point of resigning. chunk of metal into orbit with the brute Navy into space with an unauthorized- Nazidom's power-grabbers began fighting force of a souped-up Redstone; the Office and presumably undignified-major satel- for control of the weapon Hitler had ap- lite. The Army, which had had the fore- proved, and in February 1944, Wernher sight to bring Von Braun and his team to von Braun was jailed by Heinrich Himm- the U.S. in the first place, and which had ler's black-shirted SS because he declined supported him all along in the face of to connive in putting the Peenemünde awesome obstacles, would have liked project under SS control instead of army nothing better than for him to toss up control. Only after Dornberger convinced the first U.S. satellite. Such men as Lieut. Hitler himself that the V-2 program General James Gavin, the brainy chief of would collapse immediately without Von Research and Development, and Major Braun was Von Braun released. By that General John Medaris, the able military time he had begun to like his jail. "I had commander at the Army Ballistic Missile plenty of time to think," says he, "and it Agency, saw in a successful moon, and its was so quiet there." proof of rocket superiority, a way for the U.S. Attention. Von Braun returned Army to break out of its post-Korea roles- to Peenemünde to rain V-2 ruin on Lon- and-missions bog-down. But the orders don (when the first V-2 smashed London, giving Vanguard its exclusive franchise on Spaceman von Braun remarked to a friend space were clear and firm, and the Army that the rocket had worked perfectly ex- could not risk defying them. cept for landing on the wrong planet). General Medaris therefore had no But the war was already lost for Nazi choice but to call Von Braun. "Wernher," Germany. Caught between the advancing said he, "I must put you under direct Russian and U.S. armies, Von Braun and orders personally to inspect that fourth most of his tried, tested rocket team de- stage to make sure it is not live." Without cided to go with the West. They fueled a satellite, Jupiter-C flew 3,300 miles— trucks with rocket alcohol and headed farther than any U.S. missile before or south. Von Braun had printed official- since. Wernher von Braun knew then that looking stickers with the mysterious let- Associated Press he could surely launch a satellite-if ters VZBV-standing for some fictional ARMY'S MEDARIS given the chance. sort of "Special Project Disposition"- "Wernher, let's go!" The Chance. He got his chance, months which cleared all roadblocks for them. later, the hard way. On the night of Oct. During the trip Von Braun's driver fell of Naval Research kicked in $88,000 for 4, 1957, Von Braun was called to the asleep at the wheel, the car crashed, Von work on an instrumented satellite, and telephone from a Redstone dinner honor- Braun's left arm was broken and his face Project Orbiter was born. It was short- ing Defense Secretary-designate Neil Mc- gashed (he still has a scar above his lip). lived; a panel of scientists sailed into the Elroy. Voice on the wire: "New York Von Braun and Dornberger stayed three picture to recommend that the U.S. satel- Times calling, Doctor." Von Braun: weeks in a Bavarian mountain lodge, final- lite become a project for the International "Yes?" Timesman: "Well, what do you ly sent Von Braun's younger brother, Geophysical Year, and decided to put think of it?" Von Braun: "Think of Magnus, bicycling downhill to invite the their money on the beautifully designed what?" Timesman: "The Russian satel- Americans to come and capture Peene- but totally untried Navy Vanguard. Ar- lite, the one they just orbited." münde's top rocketmen. (Says Magnus: "I gued Wernher von Braun: "This is not a Von Braun hurried back to the dinner was the youngest, I spoke the best Eng- design contest. It is a contest to get a table, broke the news of Sputnik I, turned lish, and I was the most expendable.") satellite into orbit, and we're way ahead earnestly to Neil McElroy. "Sir," he said, The U.S. Army was delighted to accept on this." He was overruled. In the as- "when you get back to Washington you'll that invitation and, in a project known as tonishing I955 decision to divorce satel- find that all hell has broken loose. I wish Operation Paperclip, selected Von Braun lite development from weaponry, the Van- you would keep one thought in mind and I20 of his best team members to go guard was accepted as having more "dig- through all the noise and confusion: we to the U.S. under contract with the Army nity." Snorted Wernher von Braun at the can fire a satellite into orbit 60 days to build rockets. time: "I'm all for dignity. But this is a from the moment you give us the green "How Dignified?" Once it had them, cold-war tool. How dignified would our light." Army Secretary Wilber Brucker, the U.S. hardly knew what to do with position really be if a man-made star of who had accompanied McElroy, raised a the German rocketeers. The world was unknown origin suddenly appeared in our hand of objection: "Not 60 days." Von again at peace, and no Congressman in skies?" Braun was insistent: "Sixty days." Gen- his right mind would appropriate money Wernher von Braun and his rocket eral Medaris settled it: "Ninety days." for missilery or for Von Braun's dream team, the world's most experienced, were Neil McElroy remembered the Army's of space exploration. Von Braun and his specifically ordered to forget about satel- promise (for that matter the Army, with men, lonely and discouraged, were set lite work. They did no such thing, and constant pleas for a stake in space, did down at Fort Bliss, Texas, left to tinker neither did their U.S. Army bosses. The not give him a chance to forget), and around, pretty much by themselves, with Von Braun team had been authorized to two weeks after taking office he made 24 TIME, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum his decision. Wernher von Braun heard about it when Medaris' voice came over his Redstone squawk box. "Wernher," said Medaris, "let's go!" A Good Dusting. Von Braun went- and fast. The very next week, he reserved Cape Canaveral range time for the night of Jan. 29, 1958, between 10:30 p.m. and 2:30 a.m. (he would have hit it right on the nose except for bad weather). Jupiter-C had been ready for months. Says Von Braun: "All she needed was a good dusting. We simply took every bit of care on her that was humanly possible. That is the most you can do and the least you can do in missilery." But the satellite itself, with its delicate instrumentation, might well have held the whole project up for months or years— had not Wernher von Braun, during most of the period that he was barred from en- gaging in satellite work, been in what he calls "silent coordination" with Caltech's William Pickering and the University of Iowa's James Van Allen in planning Ex- plorer and its instruments. Bert Henry A Genius Quality. Thus, just 84 days VON BRAUN & FAMILY after the go-ahead from McElroy, the "There is beauty in space, and it is orderly." U.S. Explorer streaked into space. And last week Wernher von Braun, who sweated old-fashioned low-fi (they have no televi- these laws, and obey them, space will treat out the shoot in Washington (TIME, Feb. sion set) while Von Braun pores over you kindly. And don't tell me man doesn't 10), returned to his white frame house on books in the living room. There, Wernher belong out there. Man belongs wherever Huntsville's "Sauerkraut Hill"-and to von Braun last week talked to TIME Cor- he wants to go-and he'll do plenty well the brightest new day that his Army-run respondent Edwin Rees about his team's when he gets there. German rocket team had faced in more success with Explorer-and the future of than 20 years. man in space. THE ECONOMY Some 3,300 scientists and technicians work under Von Braun-but the top men, America has really been nice to us, and From Lag to Sag without exception, are old Peenemünde although we had to sit around and see the As Democratic chieftains in the Senate hands. Nearly all of them, including Von U.S. make some of the mistakes we had saw it last week, their party's Big Issue for Braun, have become U.S. citizens. Nearly made long ago in missilery-it was like this fall's congressional elections will no all could make more money in private coming around the same track again-and longer be the missile lag but the economic industry, but they have refused to leave we did feel frustrated at times, we are sag. The shift from lag to sag was evident the job. Why? Because they are all en- awfully lucky to have carried the day. It both in dark grey oratory on the Senate thusiasts, caught up in the space dream. makes us feel that we paid back part of a floor and in busy bill-drafting off the floor. Asks Wernher von Braun scornfully: debt of gratitude we owed this country. "The people of this country are in seri- "What corporation would have sent up a Missiles are really interim weapons. ous economic trouble," cried Michigan's satellite two weeks ago?" This is because both nations have them. Pat McNamara. With Massachusetts' Redstone has no set routine. "Once you Man will always seek the ultimate weapon. John Kennedy, McNamara co-sponsored have routine," says a lab chief, "you don't And you know what this is? The ultimate a bill to fatten state unemployment bene- have development any longer. Everything weapon is what the other fellow doesn't fits and make them run for 39 weeks in- changes, and if we stopped changing, we have. A Piper Cub would take care of the stead of the now-usual 26. Tennessee's Al- would be out of business." Each man is entire Roman army; one machine gun bert Gore introduced a bill to boost fed- tops in his own field, works with a mini- could have eliminated the hordes of Attila. eral aid to state and local governments mum of interference from Von Braun. These are ultimate weapons. And so would for public-works projects. In keeping with Says one: "If you leave me alone in peace, the control of space be. Man must estab- a grand design sketched out by Majority maybe I'll get finished in a year. If you lish the principle of the freedom of space Leader Lyndon Johnson-who was work- try to help me, it may take me three as he has done with freedom of the seas. ing on the economy when not busy with years." Yet the work has to be held to- And like everything else, we can only es- space-Senate Democrats were drafting gether, and that is Von Braun's job. It is tablish this from a position of relative six other recession-inspired bills, calling a job to which he brings a spectrum of strength. for increased federal spending for: roads knowledge that spans many specialties. You know, some think of the earth as a (Gore), housing (Alabama's John Spark- Explains Test Lab Chief Karl Heimburg: safe and comfortable planet, and they say man), hospitals (Alabama's Lister Hill), "I might find it hard to comprehend what that space is a hostile environment. This reclamation (New Mexico's Clinton An- Walter Haeusserman [head of the guid- is not really true. Earth is protected by its derson), flood control (Oklahoma's Rob- ance and control lab] is saying. His field blanket of atmosphere, to be sure, but it ert Kerr), aid to small business (Arkan- is strange to me. Yet Professor von Braun is a disorderly place, and unpredictable. It sas' William Fulbright). can restate it and make me see clear as is full of storms and winds, of fogs and At the other end of Pennsylvania Ave- day. This is a genius quality." ice, of earthquakes. It is also full of people nue, President Eisenhower told his press The Future of Man. When Wernher -people with thermonuclear bombs. conference that, in the opinion of his eco- von Braun goes home at night, his wife There is beauty in space, and it is or- nomic advisers, "it is reasonable to assume Maria (they have two daughters, Margrit, derly. There is по weather, and there is some upturn sometime toward the middle 5, and Iris, 9) can tell what sort of day he regularity. It is predictable. Just look at or just after the middle of the year." To has had "before he even gets to the screen our little Explorer; you can set your a newsman who asked whether the Admin- door-he shows everything in his face." clock by it-literally; it is more accurate istration might push for a tax cut if the The Von Brauns rarely leave their home at than your clock. Everything in space economy failed to perk up at midyear, night, listen to chamber music on their obeys the laws of physics. If you know Ike replied yes, added that there is such TIME, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 25 Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum a thing as "going too far with trying to Honorariums Pocketed. What the sub- fool with our economy." committee originally set out to investi- Backing up the President, Treasury gate was whether Washington's "Big Six" Secretary Robert B. Anderson and Fed- regulatory commissions* had been oper- eral Reserve Board Chairman William ating autonomously, as Congress intend- McChesney Martin agreed in testimony ed, without undue pressures from the before Capitol Hill's Joint Economic Com- White House or Capitol Hill. Such an in- mittee that I) the U.S. economy is basi- vestigation might well have been valuable cally healthy and can be expected to re- and would have been welcomed by the cover its zip without drastic Government commissions themselves. But Professor medication, and 2) strong hypodermics, Schwartz applied for the counsel post, such as a deficit-producing tax cut, might landed it, and bloodhounded an unsched- do harm by stimulating inflation fever. uled investigation into the individual con- Inflation, warned Chairman Martin, will duct of commission members. be "one of the most crucial problems we The week's No. I witness was John have to face over the next couple of Charles Doerfer, 53, a Wisconsin lawyer years." Said Anderson: "I can conceive of named to the FCC by President Eisen- situations where tax reductions might ap- hower in 1953, and appointed chairman in propriately be brought into play, [but] mid-1957. Relentlessly, Schwartz piled up the present condition of the economy testimony and documents showing that does not warrant such action now." He Republican Doerfer had collected "hon- added a firm promise: "Neither infla- orariums" (not very lavish, usually $100) tion nor deflation will be allowed to run for speeches to various broadcasting-in- a ruinous course." dustry gatherings outside Washington. On these trips Doerfer traveled at Govern- INVESTIGATIONS ment expense, collecting $12 per diem al- Associated Press lowances, although his hosts often paid LYDIA DEAN & DAUGHTER The Unlovable Counsel his hotel bills. Most picked-over trip: a He done her wrong. Tension and excitement recalling the 1954 expedition during which Doerfer I) investigative heyday of the late Joe Mc- took part in the dedication of a station CRIME Carthy hummed in a packed, green-walled KWTV tower in Oklahoma City, and 2) hearing room on Capitol Hill last week. made a speech to a National Association The Accident The quaintly named House Subcommittee of Broadcasters convention in Spokane. The news that Mrs. Ronald Dean had on Legislative Oversight was scheduled to On this trip, as Schwartz & Co. reckoned shot and killed her 29-year-old Air Force air revelations about the Federal Com- it, Doerfer drew $296.91 in travel ex- technical sergeant husband in his parents' munications Commission, and massed ad- penses from the Government, got a total home near Oil City, Pa. shocked the mem- vance leaks to the press had hinted at sen- of $1,080.87 in cash and paid tabs from bers of that town's Optimist Club. It also sational stuff, including a "criminal fel- KWTV and the N.A.B. shocked the club's happy, do-gooding ony." Also reminiscent of the McCarthy Brass Knuckles Rapped. Doerfer's de- ladies' auxiliary, a group called the Opti- period was the doomsday rumble in the fense was that the Federal Communica- Mrs. Together, they decided to help voice of Subcommittee Counsel Bernard tions Act explicitly permits FCCommis- Lydia Dean. They passed the hat, ran Schwartz. By week's end intense, brilliant sioners to present "publications or papers notices in the newspapers, collected a de- Lawyer Schwartz, 35, New York Univer- for which a reasonable honorarium or fense fund of more than $2,000 from as sity Law School professor and author of compensation may be accepted." As for far away as Florida. By the time the trial seven published books on law, had proved hotel bills, bar tabs, etc. paid by the began in Venango County a fortnight ago, to be the most unlovable congressional in- broadcasting industry, "these things are the whole of western Pennsylvania knew vestigation counsel since Roy Cohn. accepted today as American amenities." Lydia Dean's story; she had been done But Counsel Schwartz behaved as if ac- wrong. cepting $100 honorariums was a crime Love & Marriage. Slim, doe-eyed Lydia ranking close to arson. He hectored Doer- was a Filipina of I6 when she met Airman fer so unmercifully that the American Dean at a dance in Luzon in 1952. They Civil Liberties Union protested and the dated for 21 months ("We were talking of Washington Post and Times Herald, no love," explained Lydia in her thin, childish friend of the Eisenhower Administration, voice), then got married. Dean brought his rapped Schwartz's brass knuckles. wife to the U.S. in 1954, and late that As the week went by, the heralded in- year, she had a baby girl. In 1956 Dean vestigation crumbled into a fiasco. The was transferred to a base in England, but Chicago Tribune revealed that the sub- before embarking, he found a four-room committee's chairman, Missouri Democrat apartment for her in Pleasantville (pop. Morgan M. Moulder, had put his teen-age 704), near Oil City and near the small daughter Marcia on the congressional pay- home of his parents in Shamburg. Lydia roll as his office helper, enabling her to and Dean wrote faithfully to each other draw some $12,000 during the four years for about a year. Then Dean stopped she attended high school in Camdenton, writing. When the returned to the U.S. Mo. Bleated Chairman Moulder: four months later, he called Lydia, an- "Smear!" Then the Tulsa (Okla.) Tribune nounced that he had got an English girl reported that Schwartz had collected from pregnant, wanted a divorce. Six days later the subcommittee $400 in expense pay- Dean was shot and killed by a bullet from ments for four weekends he spent in Man- an old Army Springfield rifle. hattan, where he has his own apartment. At the trial, Lydia sobbed the story of Thundered Counsel Schwartz: "Smear!" how she tried desperately to win back her husband, and of how he airily repulsed her. On the night of the killing, Dean Federal Communications Commission, Federal United Press Power Commission, Federal Trade Commission, slapped her face. Lydia ran into another LAWYER SCHWARTZ Interstate Commerce Commission, Securities and room, saw the rifle. She decided, she testi- He cried "Smear!" Exchange Commission, Civil Aeronautics Board. fied, to prove her love by demanding that 26 TIME, FEBRUARY 17, 1958 Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum OFFICE OF THE VICE PRESIDENT WASHINGTON, D.C. GUEST CARD Date 8Van'58 Name Wernher von (Please Braun print) pilo Home address: Street 907 McClung St City Huntsville State Ala Washington address: Hotel Raleigh Length of stay in city Leaving tonite 80140-h GPO Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum OFFICE OF THE VICE preSideNT WASHINGTON RN ~ Space rsch not in Sens Balance hdure us ideas. Killiam seems fovorable of Se adv Cute, RN: will discuss, not daide, reys officials the decide, Cannot publicly spt- - box in Impessed, RN: advice - commincy Congressmen also Prec Branch Killiam, see strauss seo. allen REC - Call Strauss, Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum OFFICE OF THE VICE presideNT WASHINGTON arruw SMIT Those attending 3:00 p. m. meeting Dr. Von Braun - Army Ballestic Missile Center Dr. W. H. Pickering - Jet-Propulsion Laboratory California Insitute of Technology Dr. Homer Newell - Naval Research Laboratory Mr. Kraft Ehricke - Convair Mr. W. G. Stroud - Army Signal Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum File 27 December 1957 Dr Xref NATIONAL SPACE ESTABLISHMENT b. A Proposal of the Rocket and Satellite Research Panel Summary of Proposal It is proposed that there be created a unified National Space Establishment for the purpose of carrying out the scientific exploration and eventual habitation of outer space. It is imperative that the United States establish and maintain scientific and technological leadership in outer space research in the interests of long-term human progress and national survival. 1. Role The role of the National Space Establishment shall be to unify and to greatly expand the national effort in outer space research, specifically excluding areas of imme- diate military urgency (e.g., the development, production and fielding of intercontinental and intermediate-range ballistic missiles). 2. Mission The broad mission of the National Space Establishment shall be to establish United States leadership in space research by 1960 and to maintain it thereafter. Accomplishment of this mission requires the following specific achievements: (a) An intensified program of scientific soundings with high altitude rockets, immediately. (b) An intensified program of scientific and tech- nical developments with small instrumented satellites of the earth, immediately. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 2 - (c) Impact on the moon with non-survival of apparatus, by 1959. (d) Placing an instrumented satellite in an orbit about the moon, by 1960. (e) Impact on the moon with survival of scientific instruments, by 1960. (f) Returnable, manned satellites in flight around the earth, by 1962. (g) Manned circumnavigation of the moon with return to the earth, by 1965. (h) Manned permanent satellite, by 1965. (1) Manned expedition to the moon by one or two men, by 1968. (j) Manned expedition to the moon by a sizeable party of men, by 1971. A thorough analysis of existing capabilities shows that all of these objectives are within reach of a unified, vigorous national effort. 3. Funds Required A detailed analysis shows that the accomplishment of the basic mission will require a national expenditure of ten billion dollars over the next decade. 4. Administrative Status of National Space Establishment (a) It is strongly desirable that the N.S.E. be given statutory status as an independent agency in order that its work can be freely directed toward broad cultural, scientific and commercial objectives. Such objectives far transcend the short term, though vitally important, military rocket missions of the Department of Defense. (b) If the proper creation of an independent agency is judged to require an intolerable delay, then it is believed that statutory existence under Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 3 - the Secretary of Defense (but not within the jurisdiction of any one of the military services) will be a workable arrangement for the immediate future. But in this event, it is urged that the "charter" of the agency ex- plicitly provide for its independence as soon as its stature and achievements make this advisable. (c) It is explicitly advised that the National Space Establishment not be placed within the jurisdiction of any one of the three military services. There are many reasons, growing out of extensive professional experience, for this view. The military services are basically operating agencies, not research ones. The research talent of any branch of the military services is almost inevitably turned toward helping meet short term, limited objectives. Such a point-of-view would assure the failure of a National Space Establishment in its broad mission -- which is truly a national one, far beyond the mission of any one of the services or of the Department of Defense taken as a whole. During the early phases of space research, it is evident that existing facilities and existing missile technology of the Department of Defense can make enormous contributions. The National Space Establishment must be set up in such a way that it enjoys the unqualified support of all three services, and not merely one of them. Such a situation is believed to be possible only if the N.S.E. is an independent agency from the outset or if it is directly responsible only to the Secretary of Defense during its early years -- with the clear pro- spect of independence at the earliest possible date. (d) There must be clear channels for mutual cooper- ation between the proposed N.S.E. and all levels of the Department of Defense, in order to assure no jeopardy of short term, vital military need on the one hand and in order to assure maximum rate of advance of space research on the other. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 4 - 5. Remarks on the Long Range Importance of Space Research It is already clear that international leadership hinges, to a very great extent, on pre-eminence in scientific and technological matters. Space research will contribute enormously to the educational, cultural, and intellectual character of the people of the United States and of the world. Indeed, the exploration and eventual habitation of outer space are the finest examples of the "Endless Frontier". It is for such bold endeavors that the highest motives of men should be invoked. There will be a rich and continuing harvest of im- portant practical applications as the work proceeds. Some of these can already be foreseen - reliable short term and long term meteorological forecasts, with all the agricultural and commercial advantages that these imply; rapid, long range radio communications of great capacity and reliability; aids to navigation and to long range surveying; television relays; new medical and biological knowledge, etc. And these will be only the beginning. Many of these applications will be of military value; but their greater value will be to the civilian community at large. (To use a homely example, the telephone is certainly a valuable military device, but its importance to the civilian population is vastly greater.) 6. Availability of the Rocket and Satellite Research Panel for Consultation and Participation The Rocket and Satellite Research Panel comprises a broad membership of persons of extensive experience in all aspects of the proposed program of outer space research. Its members are professionally dedicated to national leader- ship in this field. They offer their services, individually and collectively, in the conduct of the broad mission of the National Space Establishment. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum rate: Some of these address are absolete. Our list of Scientists del 5-8-58 has Current address - 5 - The Rocket and Satellite Research Panel Berning, W. W. Army Ballistics Research Laboratory Delsasso, L. A. Army Ballistics Research Laboratory Dow, W. G. University of Michigan Ehricke, K. Convair Corp. Ference, M. Ford Research Laboratory Green, C. F. General Electric Company Greenberg, M. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Jones, L. M. University of California at for angeles University of Michigan Kaplan, J. Kellogg, W. W. Rand Corporation Newell, H. E. Naval Research Laboratory Nichols, M. H. University of Michigan O'Day, M. D. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Pickering, W. H. Jet Propulsion Laboratory Spencer, N. W. University of Michigan Stehling, K. Naval Research Laboratory Stewart, H. J. Stroud, W. G. Army Signal Engineering Laboratory sent Jet Propulsion Laboratory Strughold, H. Randolph Air Force Base Stuhlinger, E. Army Ballistic Missile Agency Redione and Townsend, J. W. Naval Research Laboratory Van Allen, J. A. University of Iowa Chairman Von Braun, W. Army Ballistic Missile Agency Whipple, F. L. Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Wyckoff, P. H. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Zelikoff, M. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Megerian, G. K. Secretary General Electric Company - no congerther mail returned Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum the File le. 1. Werner von Braun speaking for Rocket and Sattelite Panel 907 McClung Street of the National Science Academy Huntsville, Alabama 2. Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger 3106 Rowe Drive, S.E. Huntsville, Alabama 3. Krafft A. Ehricke 4615 Mensington Drive San Diego 16, California 4. Prof. James Van Allen President of American Rocket Society Department of Physics State University of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa MEMO FOR RN: 1. Gentlemen 1,2 & 3 above came here. Dr. Von Braun stated the attached resolution was given to L. Johnson and his Preparedness Subcmte and he wanted you to know. His primary mission was to ask for an appointment for gentleman #4 above to come see you and discuss the resolution - answer your questions, etc. already 2. The proposal is basically Von Braun's - it recommends setting up a National Space Establishment. To begin with it might start out under X-d Defense, but should get its independence as soon as possible. He has a number of good reasons - identification with peaceful purposes, civilian- sciethific flavor, need to take over mini-track stations all over world which wher military occupancy would produce complications. 3. I noted that this proposal might run counter to the new set-up under McElroy, separate from the Services, to run space programs. He said his idea was to supplement. Missiles of course would be left with Defense. 40 Charlie & I thanked the gentlemen - told them we would ask you about the appointment. 5. My recommendation: You read the attachments and if you think Prof. an Allen could add anything and if you have time - we can set up an appointment. Very Resp'y R.ECush In Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum OFFICE OF THE vice president WASHINGTON Am RKA Soc apt r + Sat Panel of Natl Sc and resolved Nati Space Estab. Lv missiles to fern L. Johnson has copy. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum Enclosure I 4 January 1958 NATIONAL SPACE ESTABLISHMENT The American Rocket Society and the Rocket and Satellite Research Panel have independently studied a national pro- gram for space flight. This summary document, prepared by officers of both of these organizations outlines the basic premises which are common to both of these proposals. Summary of Proposal It is proposed that there be created a National Space Flight Program and a unified National Space Establishment for the purpose of carrying out the scientific exploration of outer space. It is imperative that the United States establish and maintain scientific and technological leadership in outer space research in the interests of long-term human progress and national survival. 1. Role The role of the National Space Establishment shall be to unify and to greatly expand the national effort in outer space research and in the practical utilization of space capabilities specifically excluding space weapon development and military opera- tions in space which are considered to be the responsibility of the Department of Defense. 2. Mission The broad mission of the National Space Establishment shall be to establish United States leadership in space research and other non-military space operations by 1960 and to maintain it thereafter. Accomplishment of this mission requires the following specific achievements: (a) An intensified program of scientific soundings with high altitude rockets, immediately. (b) An intensified program of scientific and tech- nical developments with small instrumented satellites of the earth, immediately. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum National Space Establishment Page 2 1-4-58 (c) Impact on the moon with non-survival of apparatus, by 1959. (d) Placing an instrumented satellite in an orbit about the moon, by 1960. (e) Launching of an instrumented vehicle, into an independent heliocentric orbit between Earth and Venus by 1960, to improve the accuracy of astrono- mical constants and to explore environmental conditions in interplanetary space (meteoritic matter and inter- planetary plasma). (f) Impact on the moon with survival of scientific instru- ments, by 1960. (g) Sending an instrumented comet to circumnavigate the planet Venus by 1961. (h) Returnable, manned satellites in flight around the earth, by 1961 or 1962. (1) Small inhabitable permanent satellites by 1963. (j) Manned circumnavigation of the moon with return to the earth, by 1965. (k) Manned expedition to the moon by one or two men by 1968. (1) Establishment of a permanent human base, if desired, beginning 1970. (m) Fast manned reconnaisance flight to Mars and Venus without landing, beginning 1972. A thorough analysis of existing capabilities shows that all of these objectives are within reach of a unified, vigorous national effort. 3. Administrative Status of National Space Establishment (a) It is strongly desirable that the N.S.E. be given statutory status as an independent agency in order that its work can be freely directed toward broad cultural, scientific and commercial objectives. Such objectives far transcend the short term, though fin terms OF national strength, Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum National Space Establishment Page 3 1-4-58 3. Administrative Status of National Space Establishment = Cont'd. (a) Cont'd vitally important, military rocket missions of the Department of Defense. (b) If the proper creation of an independent agency is judged to require an intolerable delay, then it is believed that the statutory existence under the Secretary of Defense (but not within the jurisdiction of any one of the military services) will be a workable arrangement for the immediate future. But in this event, it is urged that the "charter" of the agency explicitly provide for its independence as soon as its stature and achievements make this advisable. (c) It is emphasized that the National Space Flight Establish- ment should not have defense missions in the direct sense of this word, since such missions would necessarily place it under the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense. The military use of space and the development of space weapon systems should be directed by the Department of Defense whose duty it is to coordinate the weapon develop- ment of the three military services. By separating the above mentioned scientific, cultural and commercial objec- tives of the N.S.E. from the military objectives of the Department of Defense, the eventual administrative separa- tion of these two agencies becomes clearly desirable. (d) It is explicitly advised that the National Space Establish- ment not be placed within the jurisdiction of any one of the three military services. There are many reasons, growing out of extensive professional experience, for this view. The military services are basically operating agencies, not research ones. The research talent of any branch of the military services is almost inevitably turned toward help- ing meet short term, limited objectives. Such a point-of- view would assure the failure of a National Space Establish- ment in its broad mission - which is truly a national one, far beyond the mission of any one of the services or the Department of Defense taken as a whole.^ During the early phases of space research, it is evident that existing faci- lities and existing missile technology of the Department of Defense can make enormous contributions. The National Space Establishment must be set up in such a. way that it enjoys the unqualified support of all three services, and not merely one of them. Such a situation is believed to be possible only if the N.S.E. is an independent agency from the outset or if it is directly responsible only to the Secretary of Defense during its early years - with the clear prospect of independence at the earliest possible date. Military projects will, of course, continually draw great benefit from the developments and the Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum N.S.E. National Space Establishment Page 4 1-4-58 3. Administrative Status of National Space Establishment - Cont'd. (e) There must be clear channels for mutual cooperation bètween the proposed N.S.E. end all levels of the Depart- ment of Defense, in order to assure no jeopardy of short term, vital military need on the one hand and in order to assure maximum rate of advance of space research on the other. 4. Remarks on the Long Range Importance of Space Research It is already clear that international leadership hinges, to a very great extent, on pre-eminence in scientific and technologi- cal matters, Space research will contribute enormously to the educa- tional, cultural, and intellectual character of the people of the United States and of the world. Indeed, the exploration and even- tual habitation of outer space are the finest examples of the "Endless Frontier". It is for such bold endeavors that the highest motives of men should be invoked. There will be a rich and continuing harvest of important practical applications as the work proceeds. Some of these can already be foreseen - reliable short term and long term metsorolo- gical forecasts, with all the agricultural and commercial advantages that these imply; rapid, long range radio communications of great capacity and reliability; aids to navigation and to long range survey- ing; television relays; new medical and biological knowledge, etc. And these will be only the beginning. Many of these applications will be of military value; but their greater value will be to the civilian community at large. (To use a homely example, the telephone is cer- tainly a valuable military device, but its importance to the civilian population is vastly greater.) 5. Availability of technical experts for Consultation and Partici- pation The Rocket and Satellite Research Panel as well as the technical committees of the American Rocket Society comprise. a broad membership of persons of extensive experience in all aspects of the proposed program of outer space research. Its members are profession- ally dedicated to national leadership in this field. They offer their Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum National Space Establishment Page 5 1-4-58 5. Availability of technical experts for Consultation and Partici- pation - Cont'd services, individually and collectively, in the conduct of the broad mission of the National Space Establishment. James Van Allen, Chairman Rocket & Satellite Research Panel George P. Sutton President American Rocket Society Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum 27 December 1957 NATIONAL SPACE ESTABLISHMENT A Proposal of the Rocket and Satellite Research Panel Summary of Proposal It is proposed that there be created a unified National Space Establishment for the purpose of carrying out the scientific exploration and eventual habitation of outer space. It is imperative that the United States establish and maintain scientific and technological leadership in outer space research in the interests of long-term human progress and national survival. 1. Role The role of the National Space Establishment shall be to unify and to greatly expand the national effort in outer space research, specifically excluding areas of imme- diate military urgency (e.g., the development, production and fielding of intercontinental and intermediate-range ballistic missiles). 2. Mission The broad mission of the National Space Establishment shall be to establish United States leadership in space research by 1960 and to maintain it thereafter. Accomplishment of this mission requires the following specific achievements: (a) An intensified program of scientific soundings with high altitude rockets, immediately. (b) An intensified program of scientific and tech- nical developments with small instrumented satellites of the earth, immediately. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 2 - (c) Impact on the moon with non-survival of apparatus, by 1959. (d) Placing an instrumented satellite in an orbit about the moon, by 1960. (e) Impact on the moon with survival of scientific instruments, by 1960. (f) Returnable, manned satellites in flight around the earth, by 1962. (g) Manned circumnavigation of the moon with return to the earth, by 1965. (h) Manned permanent satellite, by 1965. (i) Manned expedition to the moon by one or two men, by 1968. (j) Manned expedition to the moon by a sizeable party of men, by 1971. A thorough analysis of existing capabilities shows that all of these objectives are within reach of a unified, vigorous national effort. 3. Funds Required A detailed analysis shows that the accomplishment of the basic mission will require a national expenditure of ten billion dollars over the next decade. 4. Administrative Status of National Space Establishment (a) It is strongly desirable that the N.S.E. be given statutory status as an independent agency in order that its work can be freely directed toward broad cultural, scientific and commercial objectives. Such objectives far transcend the short term, though vitally important, military rocket missions of the Department of Defense. (b) If the proper creation of an independent agency is judged to require an intolerable delay, then it is believed that statutory existence under Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 3 - the Secretary of Defense (but not within the jurisdiction of any one of the military services) will be a workable arrangement for the immediate future. But in this event, it is urged that the "charter" of the agency ex- plicitly provide for its independence as soon as its stature and achievements make this advisable. (c) It is explicitly advised that the National Space Establishment not be placed within the jurisdiction of any one of the three military services. There are many reasons, growing out of extensive professional experience, for this view. The military services are basically operating agencies, not research ones. The research talent of any branch of the military services is almost inevitably turned toward helping meet short term, limited objectives. Such a point-of-view would assure the failure of a National Space Establishment in its broad mission which is truly a national one, far beyond the mission of any one of the services or of the Department of Defense taken as a whole. During the early phases of space research, it is evident that existing facilities and existing missile technology of the Department of Defense can make enormous contributions. The National Space Establishment must be set up in such a way that it enjoys the unqualified support of all three services, and not merely one of them. Such a situation is believed to be possible only if the N.S.E. is an independent agency from the outset or if it is directly responsible only to the Secretary of Defense during its early years with the clear pro- spect of independence at the earliest possible date. (d) There must be clear channels for mutual cooper- ation between the proposed N.S.E. and all levels of the Department of Defense, in order to assure no jeopardy of short term, vital military need on the one hand and in order to assure maximum rate of advance of space research on the other. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 4 - 5. Remarks on the Long Range Importance of Space Research It is already clear that international leadership hinges, to a very great extent, on pre-eminence in scientific and technological matters. Space research will contribute enormously to the educational, cultural, and intellectual character of the people of the United States and of the world. Indeed, the exploration and eventual habitation of outer space are the finest examples of the "Endless Frontier". It is for such bold endeavors that the highest motives of men should be invoked. There will be a rich and continuing harvest of im- portant practical applications as the work proceeds. Some of these can already be foreseen - reliable short term and long term meteorological forecasts, with all the agricultural and commercial advantages that these imply; rapid, long range radio communications of great capacity and reliability; aids to navigation and to long range surveying; television relays; new medical and biological knowledge, etc. And these will be only the beginning. Many of these applications will be of military value; but their greater value will be to the civilian community at large. (To use a homely example, the telephone is certainly a valuable military device, but its importance to the civilian population is vastly greater.) 6. Availability of the Rocket and Satellite Research Panel for Consultation and Participation The Rocket and Satellite Research Panel comprises a broad membership of persons of extensive experience in all aspects of the proposed program of outer space research. Its members are professionally dedicated to national leader- ship in this field. They offer their services, individually and collectively, in the conduct of the broad mission of the National Space Establishment. Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum - 5 - The Rocket and Satellite Research Panel Berning, W. W. Army Ballistics Research Laboratory Delsasso, L. A. Army Ballistics Research Laboratory Dow, W. G. University of Michigan Ehricke, K. Convair Corp. Ference, M. Ford Research Laboratory Green, C. F. General Electric Company Greenberg, M. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Jones, L. M. University of Michigan Kaplan, J. University of California Kellogg, W. W. Rand Corporation Newell, H. E. Naval Research Laboratory Nichols, M. H. University of Michigan O'Day, M. D. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Pickering, W. H. Jet Propulsion Laboratory Spencer, N. W. University of Michigan Stehling, K. Naval Research Laboratory Stewart, H. J. Jet Propulsion Laboratory Stroud, W. G. Army Signal Engineering Laboratory Strughold, H. Randolph Air Force Base Stuhlinger, E. Army Ballistic Missile Agency Townsend, J. W. Naval Research Laboratory Van Allen, J. A. University of Iowa Chairman Von Braun, W. Army Ballistic Missile Agency Whipple, F. L. Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory Wyckoff, P. H. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Zelikoff, M. Air Force Cambridge Research Center Megerian, G. K. General Electric Company Secretary Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum Von Braun 11 Jan 1958 RN will Ericke see after 20 Jan File Huntsville, Alabama Jefferson 64411 X 4814 RNDaw paw wed 3:00 22, 22, yan fan Reproduced at the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum