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DESTINATION MOON: A History of the
Lunar Orbiter Program
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- CHAPTER III: BEGINNING THE LUNAR
ORBITER PROGRAM
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- The Langley Source Evaluation
Board
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- [56] During September
the Lunar Orbiter Project Office at Langley established the Source
Evaluation Board (SEB) which it divided into several teams of
experts who would analyze every contract proposal which they
received. As an important part of the SEB, the Lunar Orbiter
Project Office formed the Lunar Orbiter Proposal Scientist Panel
to consider the scientific merits of each bidder's approach. The
members of this reviewing group were Clinton E. Brown and Samuel
Katzoff from Langley, Jack Lorell from the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Norman Ness from the Goddard Space Flight Center,
Bruce Murray from the California Institute of Technology, and
Robert P. Bryson from NASA Headquarters.10 They helped in the critical phase of proposal
analysis, which began in October and lasted more than six
weeks.
Of the score of possible aerospace companies
which seemed to have the capability to carry out the objectives of a
lunar orbiter program, five submitted contract proposals. To
understand the significance of the spacecraft proposal which NASA
finally chose, it will be useful briefly [57] to summarize the
five choices which industry presented, remembering that NASA wanted a
lunar orbiter which would require as little development of systems
and as much use of off-the-shelf hardware as possible.

