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General
Leslie Groves, in the Summer
of 1942 was appointed director of the Manhattan Project. He was
a heavy handed and forceful leader that drove the scientists crazy.
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J.
Robert Oppenheimer was appointed by General Groves to head up
the Manhattan Project on . Born in New York in 1904, he received
his Ph.D. in Germany in 1925 and returned to UC Berkeley in 1929.
In 1942, he was selected to head Los Alamos National Laboratory.
After the war he stated to President, "Mr. President, I have
blood on my hands." |
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President
Harry S. Truman became president after the death of FDR. Taking
office on April 12, 1945, he assumed a huge responsibility. Germany
would surrender in less than a month but the tough decision to
drop the atomic bomb on Japan and end the war was his to make.
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Col.
James Marshall was selected by
the Army Corps of Engineers to oversee the construction of factories
to separate uranium isotopes and manufacture plutonium for the
bomb.
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Vannevar
Bush was vice-president and dean at MIT in 1932. He met
with Roosevelt in 1940 and convinced him to create the National
Defense Resource Committee (NDRC), to organize military technology
research. in September 1942 he created and chaired the Military
Policy Committee that the Manhattan Project reported to.
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James
B. Conant a chemist and president of Harvard University took
over leadership of the NDRC in June of 1941. Soon after, he became
in charge of the S-1 Section from the existing Advisory Committee
on Uranium.
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Rear
Admiral William Sterling Parsons was associate director of
the Los Alamos Laboratory and director of the Ordinance Division.
He was also the Commander of the Hiroshima bombing mission.
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Robert
Serber presented a series of
five lectures in 1943 to Los Alamos scientist that summarized
all that was known about designing and building an atomic bomb.
This was based mostly on his independent work and is compiled
in the "Los Alamos Primer".
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Richard
Feynman awarded the 1965
Nobel Prize in Physics. In 1942 at 24 years of age, Feynman became
the leader of the theoretical division. Feynman worked on estimating
how much uranium would be needed to achieve critical mass. HE
also developed procedures that protected others from radiation
poisoning.
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Glen
Seaborg awarded the 1951
Nobel Prize in Chemistry. He was involved in the discovery of
Plutonium and lead the Manhattan Project's chemical process for
the separation, concentration and isolation of plutonium.
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