Werner Von Braun's National Space Institute, founded to unite NASA, aerospace corporations and space enthusiasts in support of NASA's budget, was still around, moribund and stable. Before I knew it, NSI and the mortally wounded L5 Society were merging. A lot of us, including me, weren't happy to see this opportunity for a radically serious reality check absorbed by The Establishment. So, I'll admit it: That was the primary impetus behind my proposal to the new president, Ben Bova. I asked President Bova to make the first official public act of the new society, to be called The National Space Society, a radical acceptance of a reality not addressable by the National Space Institute as originally envisioned:
There was a serious problem at NASA and its aerospace contractors.
My proposal to the NSS's first President was to make a Presidential Award for Ethics and Integrity to the four Morton Thiokol engineers who had to be excluded from the meeting during which the fateful decision to launch the space shuttle Challenger was made -- primarily because they would not back down from their "no-go" recommendations despite pressure from NASA to launch, apparently in time for President Ronald Reagan's State of the Union address to the US Congress.
I offered to do all the leg work, paying a trophy shop to make four engraved wall plaques, one for each of Roger Boisjoly, Robert Ebeling, Alan McDonald and Arnie Thompson -- and to work with Morton Thiokol public relations to allow an official acceptance from their engineers. Bova accepted the proposal and at the National Space Society's first national meeting in Pittsburgh, Ben Bova allowed me to present the plaques to Arnie Thompson, Supervisor Structures Design who accepted on behalf of all four engineers. It was to be the first of many awards to those men for their engineering ethics under enormous professional pressure to buckle.

Jim Bowery, at the first national meeting of the National Space Society, presenting the National Space Society's Presidential Award for Ethics and Integrity to Arnie Thompson who accepts on behalf of Morton Thiokol engineers, Roger Boisjoly, Robert Ebeling, Alan McDonald and himself. Ben Bova, President of NSS, looks on.