air. Once we opened the windows wide, the light of
scientific talent began to pour in. Once more, Coleridge’s
Ancient Mariner came to mind: “Swiftly, swiftly flew the
ship,\ Riding gently the oncoming tide.”
Sometime in the beginning of 1983, Prof. Dhawan
visited DRDL. I reminded him of his own advice to me
almost a decade ago: “You have to dream before your
dreams can come true. Some people stride towards
whatever it is that they want in life; others shuffle their feet
and never get started because they do not know what they
want—and do not know how to find it either.” ISRO was
lucky to have had Prof. Sarabhai and Prof. Dhawan at the
helm—leaders who elucidated their goals, made their
missions larger than their lives, and could then inspire their
entire workforce. DRDL had not been so lucky. This
excellent laboratory played a truncated role that did not
reflect its existing or potential capabilities or even fulfill the
expectations in South Block. I told Prof. Dhawan about the
highly professional, but slightly bewildered team I had. Prof.
Dhawan responded with his characteristic broad smile
which could be interpreted in any way one chose.
In order to accelerate the pace of R&D activities at
DRDL, it was imperative that decisions on vital scientific,
technical and technological problems be taken quickly.
Throughout my career I had zealously pursued openness in
scientific matters. I had seen from very close quarters the
decay and disintegration that go with management through
closed-door consultations and secret manipulations. I
always despised and resisted such efforts. So the first
major decision which we took was to create a forum of
senior scientists where important matters could be
discussed
Plate 9 The twin-engine indigenous hovercraft
prototype Nandi developed at ADE, Bangalore. As
inventor and pilot, I took my rightful place at the
controls.