Page:Project Mercury - A Chronology.pdf/30

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Part I — Major Events Leading to Project Mercury
13

1957 (Cont.)

December 6

IGY Vanguard (TV-3), the first with three live stages, failed to launch a test satellite.[1]

December 10

The Air Force created a Directorate of Astronautics to manage and coordinate astronautical research programs, including work on satellites and antimissile-missile weapons. Brigadier General Homer A. Boushey was named to head the office. Later in the month the order was rescinded by James H. Douglas, Secretary of the Air Force, who considered the creation of such a group before the activation of the Advanced Research Projects Agency to be premature.[2]

1958

January 4

The American Rocket Society and the Rocket and Satellite Research Panel issued a summary of their proposals for a National Space Establishment. The consensus was that the new agency should be independent of the Department of Defense and not, in any event, under one of the military services.[3]

January 10

A successful limited flight was made by the fourth Atlas fired from Cape Canaveral.[4]

January 12

President Eisenhower, answering a December 10, 1957, letter from Soviet Premier Nikolai A. Bulganin regarding a summit conference on disarmament, proposed that Russia and the United States "…agree that outer space should be used for peaceful purposes." This proposal was compared dedicate atomic energy to peaceful uses, an offer which The Soviets rejected.[5][6]

January 15

The Air Force received 11 unsolicited industry proposals for Project 7969, and technical evaluation was started. Observers from NACA participated. (See March 1956 entry.)[7]

January 16

A resolution was adopted by NACA stating that NACA had an important responsibility for coordinating and conducting research in space technology,

  1. Emme, Aeronautics and Astronauties: 1915-1960, p. 92.
  2. House Rpt. 67, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 36.
  3. Emme, Aeronautics and Astronauties: 1915-1960, p. 94.
  4. House Rpt. 67, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 36.
  5. House Document No. 71, 86th Congress, 1st Sess., p. 18
  6. Emme, Aeronautics and Astronautics: 1915-1960, p. 94.
  7. "Outline of History of USAF Man-in-Space R&D Program," Missiles and Rockets, Vol. 10, No. 13 (March 26, 1962), pp. 148-149.