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			 Part 
			2 - The Suicide Club Gives Birth to Both the U.S. and Chinese 
			Missile Programs 
			I arrived back at the apartment too late to catch the nightly news 
			soap opera with Dan, Tom, McLehrer, and Peter. I opened a Dos XX and 
			selected some CDs. The Hooters and Pink Floyd.
 
			My two cats didn't like the music. They scowled and left for another 
			room.
 
 I started in on the stack of materials Sheri had left me.
 
				
				"Guess what," Sheri 
				had said. "The project Jack Parsons was involved in at Cal Tech 
				was called the GALCIT Rocket Research Project. It became the Jet 
				Propulsion Laboratory. I found two histories of the program--one 
				written in 1940 and one in 1954. You'll be especially surprised 
				at what you find in the later one."  
			I sifted through the 
			pile. The earlier pamphlet was entitled "The Daniel Guggenheim 
			Graduate School of Aeronautics of the California Institute of 
			Technology: A History of the First Ten Years," Bulletin of the 
			California Institute of Technology, Vol. 49, No. 2, Pasadena, 
			Calif., May, 1940. 
 It said the GALCIT Rocket Research Project had begun in 1936 at the 
			private initiative of a group composed of Frank Malina, Hsue-Shen 
			Tsien, A.M.O.Smith, John W. Parsons, Edward S. Forman, and Weld 
			Arnold. Weld Arnold had financed the group with a $1,000 donation. 
			The group seemed to revolve around Malina, Parsons, and Forman.
 
				
				"The problem of 
				rocket motor design, based on the theory of perfect gases, was 
				discussed by F.J.Malina. J.W.Parsons and E.S.Forman made an 
				experimental study of the fast-burning powder rocket motor. The 
				practicability of various substances as propellants for jet 
				propulsion was investigated by J.W. Parsons."  
			So Parsons was the fuel 
			expert. The experimenter. The kid who mixed the powder and turned 
			jet propulsion into reality. I checked the references. There were 
			two papers by Parsons listed, one published, one unpublished: 
			"Experiments with Powder Motors for Rocket Propulsion by Successive 
			Impulses," with Edward Forman, in Astronautics, No. 43 (1939), 4; 
			and "A Consideration of the Practicality of Various Substances as 
			Fuels for Jet Propulsion." 
 Returning to the history, I discovered there had been other reports 
			"prepared for manufacturing concerns and government agencies by 
			F.J.Malina, with the assistance of J.W.Parsons and E.S.Forman. These 
			dealt with a general review of rocket propulsion and the possibility 
			of application to heavier-than-air craft."
 
 According to the history, the GALCIT program had recently (in 1940) 
			been expanded under the sponsorship of the Committee of the National 
			Academy of Sciences for Air Corps Research. The program was directed 
			by Theodore von Karman, who was chairman of the subcommittee on jet 
			propulsion. "The experimental part of the program is being carried 
			out by F.J.Malina, J.W.Parsons, and E.S.Forman."
 
 The second history was entitled The Guggenheim Aeronautical 
			Laboratory of the California Institute of Technology: The First 
			Twenty-Five Years, Cal Tech, Pasadena, June 1954.
 
 In the text, Parsons was not mentioned by name. On the other hand, 
			only a few people such as von Karman were. I turned to the list of 
			research references and checked those against the papers from the 
			earlier history. Seven references under "Rocket Research Project" 
			were listed in the 10-year history. The same names and articles were 
			listed in the 25-year history, except for papers by Jack Parsons and 
			his co-author Edward Forman.
 
 I looked again at the date.
 
 June 1954.
 
 Two years after his well-publicized death, a co-founder of the Jet 
			Propulsion Laboratory had been excised from Cal Tech history.
 
 It smelled of patricide. The academicians had had their revenge. 
			Take the embarrassing fellow without the degree and bury him in the 
			footnotes. Then delete the footnotes.
 
 The twenty-five year history was sanitized in more ways than one. 
			Its tired prose overlooked private initiative entirely and 
			arrogantly gave the credit for research and progress in the field of 
			early aeronautics to Cal Tech and the National Academy of Sciences. 
			But the history was still helpful. It made clear that the original 
			project had been absorbed by the military--the Army Air Force.
 
				
				"Because of the possible application of rocket propulsion to 
			assisted takeoff of aircraft, the Army Air Force became interested 
			in the program and in 1941 took over sponsorship of the work. At 
			this time the effort was organized and known as GALCIT Project No. 1 
			. . . .    
				"By 1941 the scope 
				of both theoretical and experimental work had been greatly 
				extended. In August 1941, the first practical solid propellant 
				had been developed, and the first successful assisted-takeoff 
				tests were made. The first rocket motors shortened takeoff 
				distances of small aircraft by as much as 50 percent. After the 
				development work was completed and the assisted-takeoff motors 
				went into extensive service use, large- scale production was 
				undertaken by the Aerojet Engineering Corporation, which was 
				subsequently acquired by the General Tire and Rubber Company and 
				has recently become the Aerojet-General Corporation. . . . 
 "In 1944 the first long-range rocket research and development 
				program in the United States was started. By this time the size 
				of the project had increased to a point where the organization 
				of a separate laboratory seemed desirable. Accordingly, on 
				November 1, 1944, the Project separated from the GALCIT and 
				became known as the Jet Propulsion laboratory . . ."
 
			So this was official 
			history. The GALCIT project and Aerojet Engineering Corporation (of 
			which Parsons was one of the founding shareholders) had become an 
			important part of aerial warfare research during the Second World 
			War. Later in the 1950s the Jet Propulsion Laboratory would be at 
			the center of the race to space. It would seem no one cared to 
			acknowledge the important entrepreneurial role played by a disciple 
			of the unsavory Aleister Crowley. Why was that? 
 To do so might upset the conventional image of dispassionate 
			progress that scientific bureaucrats liked to project. Many of the 
			latter, I knew, had never had a creative thought in their lives, and 
			resented anyone who did.
 
 I decided to have another beer. I put on Duran Duran's Notorious and 
			looked out the window down Second Street, which extended from the 
			building below me. In the distance it turned into a thin ribbon of 
			lights stretching endlessly to the south.
 
 The only food I found in the kitchen was tuna I had stocked for the 
			cats. I made myself a tuna sandwich, and returned to the living 
			room.
 
 I looked to see what else Sheri had culled from the Van Pelt 
			library. She had found Theodore von Karman's autobiography, The Wind 
			and Beyond.
 
 The introduction said von Karman had been chosen over all other 
			living scientists to receive the first National Medal of Science 
			from President John Kennedy in 1963. After skimming the first few 
			pages, I checked the index and turned to the first reference to Jack 
			Parsons. Von Karman said he had been sitting in his Cal Tech office 
			one day, when three "young men" showed up wanting his help in 
			building a space rocket. It was John W. Parsons, Frank J. Malina, 
			and Edward S. Forman.
 
 The three had already talked to some other Cal Tech staff members 
			and "had been turned down because rocketry was not regarded as 
			practical or even scientifically interesting."
 
 Frank Malina was a graduate student in aeronautics at Cal Tech, and 
			wanted to do a Ph.D. thesis on rocket propulsion. He had been told 
			he would be better off getting a job in the aircraft industry. 
			Parsons was a self-taught chemist "with considerable innate 
			ability." Forman was a rocket engine tinkerer. According to von 
			Karman, both Parsons and Forman had corresponded with the early 
			German and Russian rocketeers, one of these being Willy Ley, the 
			author of many books on rocket travel. Their back yards in Pasadena 
			"were pockmarked from the effects of rocket explosions." Parsons and 
			Forman had heard that Malina was working on rocket propulsion and 
			had gone to him for advice. At the time "real scientific interest in 
			rockets . . . was virtually nil."
 
 The three wanted to build solid- and liquid-fuel rockets which could 
			perhaps fly twenty to fifty miles into space. Von Karman thought the 
			project worthwhile, because instrumented rockets could bring back 
			information about cosmic rays and weather at altitudes balloons 
			wouldn't reach. So he gave Malina permission to do his doctoral 
			thesis on rocket propulsion, and gave the group permission to use 
			the Aeronautics Laboratory during off hours, even though Parsons and 
			Forman had no formal connection with Cal Tech.
 
 The Parsons-Forman-Malina group had money problems from the start. 
			The only funds they got came from a student named Weld Arnold who 
			gave them $1,000 in return for becoming the group photographer.
 
 After one rocket misfired inside the Aeronautics Laboratory, the 
			group was moved outside to a concrete platform attached to the 
			corner of the building. Another explosion buried a piece of gauge 
			deep into the wall, and Cal Tech students started calling the group 
			the Suicide Club. To prevent difficulties with the administration, 
			von Karman decided to move the Suicide Club away from all buildings 
			as far as possible. They found a spot in the Arroyo Seco in back of 
			Devil's Gate Dam, on the western edge of Pasadena.
 
 In May 1938 "Hap" Arnold, Chief of the Army Air Corps, visited the 
			Club. He was interested in scientific applications to war, in 
			particular to the possibility of some form of rocket- assisted 
			takeoff for large bombers from small air fields, like those in the 
			Pacific Islands. The group got a $1,000 contract, and a year later 
			one for $10,000.
 
 The success of jet-assisted takeoff was followed by experiments with 
			long- range rockets. By 1945 JPL had launched America's first 
			successful high-altitude rocket, the WAC Corporal, to a height of 
			forty-seven miles. Later in 1949 at the White Sands Proving Ground 
			in New Mexico, the WAC Corporal was launched from the nose of a 
			reconstructed V-2 to a height of 244 miles.
 
 It was the first American rocket to enter extraterrestrial space. 
			Not a bad ending for a project that started with two boys from 
			Pasadena (Parsons and Foreman) with cratered backyards.
 
 Paging through the book, I found a photo of Parsons. It was taken in 
			January 1943 at the Muroc (now Edwards) Air Force Base in 
			California. It was a photograph of the founding fathers and early 
			directors of the Aerojet Engineering Corporation. The group was 
			standing in front of the Douglas Havoc attack bomber (A-20), "the 
			first U.S. airplane to take off with permanently installed rocket 
			power plant". Parsons was standing between Theodore C. Coleman, the 
			Director, and Edward S. Forman. Von Karman and Frank Malina were 
			also in the photo, along with the A-20 pilot and some others.
 
 I was surprised at Parsons' appearance. I suppose I had expected 
			some wiry New Age vegetarian type or perhaps a nerdy looking 
			intellectual. Parsons had rugged good looks with black, wavy hair. 
			Like the others, he was squinting into the sun. He carried a 
			serious, preoccupied expression.
 
 Aerojet had been founded in 1942 by Parsons-Forman-Malina, along 
			with von Karman, Andrew Haley, and Martin Summerfield. The purpose 
			had been to sell JATO (jet-assisted takeoff) units to the armed 
			forces. Each founding member had put up two hundred dollars. Von 
			Karman said that what they lacked in business acumen, they made up 
			in other ways. "Parsons, for instance, was an excellent chemist, and 
			a delightful screwball. He loved to recite pagan poetry to the sky 
			while stamping his feet. The son of a one-time tycoon, he stood 
			six-foot- one, with dark wavy hair, a small mustache, and 
			penetrating black eyes which appealed to the ladies."
 
 When Parsons wasn't working with explosives, he was the head of a 
			religious sect called the Thelemites, von Karman related. The latter 
			met in Pasadena in a mansion in a room with walls of carved leather. 
			Among other things they practiced sex rituals. Or so von Karman 
			learned when the FBI questioned him about Parsons some time later. 
			Von Karman described Parsons' mentor Aleister Crowley as an 
			"ex-mountain climber," and said Crowley's story was related in a 
			book entitled The Great Beast.
 
 Von Karman told what happened to Aerojet in a chapter entitled, "How 
			I `Lost' $12,000,000." In 1944 the company had desperately needed 
			financing to finish some contracts with the Navy. Banks would not 
			make loans for such an unstable enterprise as rocketry. After much 
			soul-searching, the owners reluctantly tried to raise capital by 
			offering half their stock to General Tire for $225,000, which the 
			group had decided was the fair value. General Tire countered with a 
			stunningly low offer of $50,000. Eventually in early 1945 the group, 
			whose voting power was held in a trust under von Karman, sold the 
			shares for $75,000.
 
 Later on General Tire wanted to completely buy out the minority 
			shareholders, including von Karman and Malina, in order to 
			consolidate Aerojet with the parent company. It offered to pay $350 
			a share. Otherwise General Tire threatened to make a $300 dividend. 
			This would deplete Aerojet of assets, and would subject von Karman 
			to heavy taxes. General Tire would also then convert the shares of 
			Aerojet into shares of the combined company at an unfavorable ratio. 
			Von Karman eventually agreed to sell. (Malina, by contrast, took the 
			$300 dividend anyway, converted his shares into those of Aerojet-General, 
			and opened an art studio in Paris.) One of von Karman's friends 
			later calculated that by selling out in 1953, von Karman had lost 
			the opportunity to be worth $12,000,000 in the 1960s.
 
 Jack Parsons and Ed Forman followed a different path. Both men had 
			dropped out of GALCIT to devote full time to Aerojet when the 
			company was formed. Then in 1945 when the group as a whole sold 
			half-interest to General Tire for $75,000, the two of them made a 
			separate agreement for the remainder of their Aerojet stock. 
			Afterwards they apparently lost contact with JPL programs. Parsons, 
			however, continued to work for other aerospace firms. Von Karman 
			heard that in 1947 Parsons had become involved in arms for Israel. 
			Some years later the Mexican government asked Parsons to set up an 
			explosives factory. Parsons told von Karman that the Mexicans were 
			providing him with a seventeenth- century castle for living 
			quarters. "But Parsons never entered it. While he was packing a 
			trailer with explosives in front of his home, a bottle of fulminate 
			of mercury slipped from his hand and exploded. A few hours later he 
			died."
 
 So this was the explanation of the "mysterious" trip to Mexico. 
			Parsons was building an munitions factory.
 
 Von Karman apparently took the conventional account of Parsons' 
			death at face value. But his account had introduced a myriad of new 
			possibilities relating to Parsons' death.
 
 If Parsons had become involved in arms dealing, he could have been 
			killed by a client or a competitor.
 
 Von Karman noted that Parsons had continued to place his stamp on 
			solid- fuel rocketry after leaving Aerojet. That might make him a 
			threat to competing companies. Could Parsons' death be a simple, if 
			extreme, case of industrial espionage?
 
 Parsons was headed to Mexico to establish an explosives factory. Did 
			someone have a reason to stop that enterprise?
 
 Parsons was the head of a religious sect. Could he have been killed 
			by a fanatic?
 
 I looked at the clock. It was nearly 3:30 a.m. I decided to glance 
			quickly at the other two books Sheri had supplied. One was entitled 
			JPL and the American Space Program. It contained another picture of 
			Parsons. Parsons, Malina, Forman, Smith and a student assistant 
			named Rudolph Schott were relaxing in a sandy area of the Arroyo 
			Seco. A rocket motor was in place, ready for testing. There were 
			sandbags behind which the group sought safety during the tests.
 
 Parsons looked quite young in the picture. Then the chronology stuck 
			me. If Parsons died in 1952 at age thirty- seven, he was only 
			twenty-one--the age of an undergraduate Junior--when he showed up in 
			von Karman's office in 1936.
 
 The history mentioned that before the GALCIT group had received the 
			$1,000 from Arnold in the Spring of 1937, Parsons and Frank Malina 
			considered writing a movie script about a flight to the moon. They 
			hoped to raise research funds by selling the script to Hollywood. (Malina 
			himself had become interested in rockets at age twelve when he had 
			read Jules Verne's From the Earth to the Moon.) Short of money a 
			year later, Parsons and Ed Forman had taken jobs with the Halifax 
			Powder Company in the Mojave Desert.
 
 The JPL history also speculated on the origin of Parsons' solution 
			to one problem with JATO rocket storage. The powder in the rockets 
			deteriorated after only a few days, so that the rockets would 
			explode instead of burning with a controlled thrust. It occurred to 
			Parsons to replace the charcoal in the powder with paving asphalt. 
			He replaced salt peter with potassium perchlorate as the oxidizer. 
			One theory said Parsons got the idea while watching a roof being 
			tarred. Malina, however, pointed out that Parsons was already 
			familiar with Greek fire, an asphalt-based material used by the 
			ancient Greeks to set ships ablaze from a distance.
 
 The other book was entitled The History of Rocket Technology, and 
			contained an article by Malina on the early days of GALCIT. It 
			explained how it all got started. During 1936 the local Pasadena 
			paper had carried an article about the possibility of rocket-powered 
			aircraft. The story was based on a seminar given by William Bollay, 
			a graduate assistant to von Karman, and reported some studies done 
			in Vienna. Jack Parsons and Ed Forman had seen the article. They 
			showed up at Cal Tech seeking help on their current project, the 
			construction of a liquid- propellant rocket motor.
 
 It was now 4:35 a.m., so I simply turned out the light. The two cats 
			began a game of hide-and-seek in the darkened room.
 
 As I lay on the couch, I kept thinking about two things I had read 
			earlier in the Karman autobiography.
 
 The first was that von Karman, a Hungarian Jew, was a descendant of 
			a mathematician at the Imperial Court of Prague who had been given 
			credit for creating the world's first mechanical robot, known as the 
			Golem.
 
 The other concerned Hsue-Shen Tsien, one of the original members of 
			the GALCIT group with Parsons, Malina, and Forman. Von Karman 
			considered Tsien one of his brightest students. Tsien had 
			co-authored the paper with von Karman and Malina that lead in 1944 
			to the ORDCIT project: a program to develop long-range jet- 
			propelled missiles. The first prototype was the Private A, a missile 
			powered by a solid-fuel rocket unit manufactured under the 
			supervision of Jack Parsons at Aerojet. Aerojet would later provide 
			a liquid-fuel rocket motor for the spectacularly successful WAC 
			Corporal.
 
 Tsien was thus a founding father of the U.S. missile program. In the 
			1960s Tsien was also credited with the successful establishment of 
			the nuclear missile program of the People's Republic of China.
 
 Tsien was a classic case of self-fulfilled reality on the part of 
			the U.S. government. As a Chinese citizen, Tsien was accused of 
			being a Communist spy during the McCarthy period because he refused 
			to testify against a colleague. Tsien's security clearance was 
			removed. Tsien said he couldn't work under those circumstances, and 
			threatened to return to China if his clearance wasn't restored. He 
			made the threat to the U.S. Under Secretary of the Navy, who was 
			ultimately responsible for some of Tsien's projects at JPL. The 
			Under Secretary panicked and had Tsien arrested by Immigration. The 
			U.S. government subsequently refused to let Tsien leave the country 
			for five years, by which time he had no desire to stay. Ten years 
			after leaving the U.S., Tsien had turned China into a missile power.
 
 As I lay in the dark, hypnagogic images of Golem blended with 
			missile- equipped Chinese Communists.
 
 Eventually, however, my thoughts drifted back to a youthful group of 
			friends and sunny afternoons in the Arroyo Seco. I fell asleep.
 
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