July lst. By revising menus and conserving provision stores the emergency
period was bridged without serious food shortage. As an added measure,
minor procurement authority was delegated to the Holmes & Narver Honolulu office to aid in providing essential items that could be shipped
directly from the Territory of Hawaii.
On August 19th, H & N was notified that the USS PRIVATE J. S.
MERRILL would be made available for limited cargo loading for sailing on
August 25. A priority system was established so that the most critically
needed items would be shipped first, and in sufficient quantities to expedite construction activities. It was extremely difficult to determine
the proper priorities, since by this time almost all of the material collected in the Oakland area was needed at once as construction scheduling
was daily becoming more complex. Special screening was required at this
time to ascertain priority requirements, and almost the entire Purchasing
Department together with key personnel from various other departments
were engaged in coordinating the shipping requirements. With this united

effort, H & N was able to segregate and load 3,745 measurement tons of
critical materials aboard the PRIVATE MERRILL within 4 days and to dispatch more than 6,000 tons on the CRAIN shortly thereafter.

With the resumption of normal shipping schedules, procurement operations for the Scientific Structures and Military Structures Programs
were continued. The Procurement Department worked closely with the design groups in the Engineering Department to control the delivery of the
required materials and equipment to coincide with the schedules that had
been established for construction at the Jobsite.
It was necessary to emphasize expediting these orders from their
point of origin to the shipping point because not only did large quantitiles of basic construction commodities have to be transported to the

Jobsite at regular dates, but it was also desirable that many thousands
of items of special hardware, tools, and equipment as well as large quantities of technically designed and specially fabricated parts and structures
follow on coordinated schedules. Of the warious scientific stations
there were a great many that included items that were required to be fab-

ricated in accordance with detailed drawings and technical specifications.
These items ranged in type from small steel rods to large stainless steel
collimator tubes, precision machined to exact tolerances, and multi-ton
castings also requiring special machining operations.

As time was a vital factor in this procurement, many contracts were
negotiated, and in some instances fabricating plants were authorized to
work around the clock and on week-ends so as to meet the delivery schedules. A number of design changes were encountered during the fabrication
of special units and this circumstance further complicated procurement
work. Close liaison had to be maintained between the Purchasing Department inspectors and design engineers to keep abreast of all specification

and design alterations.

These changes ranged from minor dimensional

variances to drastic over-all changes of entire units. In several instances work had to be stopped and new negotiations entered into with the

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