|
All Documents and Media

|
Interview with William Lipscomb. November 3, 1991. Interview by Thomas Hager for use in "Force of Nature: The Life of Linus Pauling," (Simon & Schuster, 1995).William Lipscomb's Wartime Experience. (1:16)
|
Get the Flash Player to see this audio player.
Download Audio File (Mp3) File to Your Computer
Transcript
William Lipscomb: Now, the war intervened. In the first semester of December, my draft board in Kentucky, when I left in the fall, said "We'll
get you, don't worry," and they began putting me in Y-A all the time, the ready to go category. And so I went to Linus about
this and he says "Well, we've got some war projects. I think we'll put you on them." So I had only one semester of formal
training at that point. And I went on war projects. So I was there 1941 to 1946, so a very abnormal time. It was, in one
way, a very stable time because it was the same group of people the whole time. And another, it's a very unstable time because
that any work you did on your research, you had to do at night. And all during the day you had to do some kind of war projects
and in fact in my Ph.D. thesis, there are two sections on the war work. One of the strange things - my thesis was put in
a cabinet, in a safe somewhere and nobody could find it for years.
Thomas Hager: Because it was classified.
William Lipscomb: Because it was classified.
ClipCreator: Thomas Hager, Joseph Koepfli Associated: Linus Pauling Clip ID: hager2.002.6-lipscomb
Full WorkCreator: Thomas Hager, William Lipscomb
Date: November 3, 1991 Genre: sound ID: hager2.002.6 Copyright: More Information
|