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The "no pain,
no gain path" of Collaboration
Sometimes you can do together, what you cannot
accomplish alone. Yet the path of collaboration is often
fraught with pitfalls. Working at arms length over long
distances is not easy to do, nor simple to coordinate.
Meshing one's efforts with those of others often brings
potential personality conflicts to the fore. The division
of responsibility and the need to see that all critical
elements are taken care of, are both hard to realize with
handshakes. So some projects may need to be started by
one group, but ultimately benefit from bringing in
additional support and involvement once a certain level
of definition is realized.
That said, here are some of the projects we have
helped start, or helped pursue, or which we have started
and then found cooperative support for their
completion.
- Space
Frontier Foundation
improves MMM desktop
publishing
ability.
In appreciation for
like-minded "frontier-oriented
philosophy," SFF arranged to
replace our stone age Commodore 64 with a
Mac
Plus in late 1990, and
assisted us in upgrading its memory, and adding
accessories. When an anonymous donor gave us a Mac IIsi,
they again assisted us in upgrading its memory to the
maximum. Currently, we have a power Mac 6500, purchased
with chapter funds. SFF seeks to open the space frontier
to human exploration and settlement as rapidly as
possible, and "The Foundation" remains a strong supporter
of MMM, without prejudice to our editorial
integrity.
- Amateur lunar telescope
design competition - This design competition,
instituted by LRS, was run concurrently in MMM and in
Selenology, quarterly of the American
Lunar Society, whose members are amateur astronomers
especially fascinated by the Moon. Entries were few, but
interesting.
- Lunar Prospector
Team - LRS played a critical role in the
launching of the Lunar Prospector project in 1988-89 and
has remained a strong supporter through the years. At the
'88 Denver ISDC, we ignited a bonfire of interest in Dr.
Gay E. Canough, who subsequently sold Greg Maryniak of
Space Studies Institute in taking on Lunar Prospector as
a real project, not just a paper study. He subsequently
hired Alan Binder as principal investigator and the rest
is history. LRS had organized the national design
competition for the Lunar Prospector Team patch, supplied
the prize money, and came up with the name "Lunar
Prospector". Our teammates in this early effort were Gay
Canough and Greg Maryniak of SSI, Rick Tumlinson of the
Space Frontier Foundation, and Jim Davidson of the
Houston Space Society. It took not quite ten years of
perseverance, and the heroic efforts of Al
Binder, but the successful launching and successful
search for lunar polar water ice was most gratifying.
In addition, LRS at-large member George French put
together the coordinated Moonlink
outreach program.
- MMM goes national
- in the fall '88, following a meeting with us at the
Denver '88 ISDC, the Seattle
L5 chapter came aboard to help us produce a
better, shared newsletter. This collaboration lasted over
four years, until the Seattle chapter, NSS' first,
dissolved. A new Seattle chapter has since formed, but it
is not part of the "MMM Family."
- Oregon L5 &
Oregon Moonbase - is blessed with lavatubes in
their backyard, and even secured title to a pair outside
the city of Bend, Oregon. In the summer of '92, Oregon
Moonbase leaders Bryce Walden and Cheryl York gave MMM
Editor Peter Kokh a personal tour of this facility. We
have worked with them through the years to explore and
promote the potential of lavatube use in the settlement
of the Moon. We are currently supporting their search of
the Clementine data for signs of lavatube entrances, and
the project of OR L5's Tom Billings to design and obtain
Discovery Mission status for a radar "flashbulb" probe,
now dubbed the Lunar Lavatube
Locator [LLL] mission.
- Artemis Society
International hopes to put the first commercial
outpost on the Moon in the near future and is "dedicated
to overcoming the business, financial, and technological
challenges necessary to establish a permanent,
self-sustaining human presence on the Moon." We got
involved with the organizing conference for ASI in 1995
and they eventually adopted MMM as their newsletter,
contributing their Pleiades
Report. We have since been working
with ASI to improve the quality and content of MMM,
increase its circulation, and archive back issues on
their Website.
- The
Moon Society took over membership services
from the Artemis Society (which continues to work on the
Artemis Project) in July, 2000. The Pleiades
Report section in MMM has been replaced with the
Moon Society
Journal.
Initiatives of other
organizations which we are interested in
supporting
- M.A.R.S.
- Mars Arctic
Research Station - a NASA-supported
effort by the newly-founded Mars
Society to establish a simulated Marsbase in a barren
ice-free crater on remote Devon
Island in the Canadian Arctic. LRS a strong supporter
of the Mars Society project to build a simulated Marsbase
in the Canadian Arctic. In the summer of 2001, the
Mars Desert
Research Station made its debut.
- Icepic:
the Europa Ocean Explorer Project -
this is an internet brainstorming committee exploring the
possibilities for a probe through the ice into Europa's
ocean and capable of detecting even microbial life,
should it exist there.
- ASI
- Lunar
Traders - We have been suggesting entrepreneurial
opportunities to them as they occur to us.
- Space
Chapter Hub - We originated the Space Chapter
Hub in the Spring of 2000. This is a resource
sharing website where Space Chapters of NSS,
the Mars Society, the Moon Society and
other organization can share expertise and experience
either to be better equiped for their own projects, or to
commit to joint endeavers.
YOU might be The Punch
Line
It is easy to give lip service to an effort or
idea. To make our support or involvement real in many of
these efforts will require involvement of new people. If
you are interested in helping LRS support or collaborate
with an effort, contact us at
Whatever space organization
you belong to, get it to
DO
Something, and we will support
it.
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