As the cosmonauts were training for flights to the first space station on 2 March 1971 the Council of Chief Designers met
at the TsKBEM for its first session in relation to the DOS-1 work. The Council had been formed in late 1947 by Sergey Korolev
to oversee the technical management of rocket and spacecraft development. It was chaired by Korolev, and originally comprised
the six Chief Designers of the primary rocket design bureaus: Valentin Glushko for rocket engines, Nikolay Pilyugin for guidance
systems, Viktor Kuznetsov for gyroscopes, Vladimir Barmin for launch equipment and Mikhail Ryazanskiy for radio-control systems.
After the death of Korolev in January 1966 Vasiliy Mishin took his place. He now chaired the meeting. The main presentation
was by Yevgeniy Shabarov, Bushuyev’s deputy for the testing of manned spacecraft, who said that all testing has been successfully
completed and DOS-1 and the two Soyuz 7K-T ferries were ready to be sent to Baykonur. The preparations to launch the station
— which was to be named Zarya (‘Dawn’) — were to begin on 9 March with a view to achieving a launch on 15 April. If all went
well, the first crew would follow within five days. Mishin criticised the delays in vibration testing the DOS-1 mockup, and
asked that this be completed by 29 March. There was also the issue of the warranty on the parachutes of the Soyuz, which would
expire on 15 April. The Council also discussed the efficiency of the Igla rendezvous system.