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8-9 Mary Lou
Curtis
Also there were Drs. W. Fernelius, Carl Rollinson, Fred Leity, Sergio
DeBenedetti, Robert Staniforth, Joseph Heyd, and Joe Spicka (purchasing
agent). In the following months Catherine Brenneman (later Heyd), Katie
Williams (later Conway), Eleanor Stibitz, Rachel Buck, Doug Anger, Bob
Gunther-Mohr, and Ed Kerner joined the staff.
Dr. DeBenedetti, an Italian
Jew, had worked at the Fermi Institute in Paris, and had escaped from
Mussolini's Italy on a bicycle before emigrating to the U.S.
There was no cafeteria at
Unit III at first, and no restaurants close by, so many of us went to
lunch at Unit I on Nicholas Rd. in the company station wagon. We were
piled several layers deep, and a spirit of camaraderie soon developed.
The Unit I cafeteria was not
open on Saturdays, so the girls took turns bringing in the lunch, which we
ate in the ladies' lounge. All was well until one Saturday when the girls
in charge brought in waffle irons, and made waffles for lunch. The smell
of baking waffles wafted through the entire building. At this point Dr.
Lum explained to us that since little was known about the effects of
ingested radioactive materials, it would be better if we did not eat in
the building. He assigned the station wagon to us to go wherever we liked
for Saturday lunches.
My lab was the Counting Room,
where we measured samples of radioactive materials, which enabled the
chemists to follow their processes. This was a brand new field. Little
instrumentation was commercially available, and there was little or
nothing in the literature about alpha counting. Our electronics
department, under the leadership of Dr. Heyd, developed and built most of
our early instrumentation. We developed measurement techniques which,
when we were able to publish them, established us as authorities in the
field. Later, when we moved to Mound (Laboratory in Miamisburg, Ohio), we
perfected original methods for analyzing many other radioactive
materials.
We worked 6 days a week, and
every holiday except Christmas. On New Years, Dr. Haring invited us to go
to Longo's Spaghetti House in his car for lunch. I remember how he
laughed when we walked in and they were playing the popular song (new to
him) "You Don't Get No Bread With One Meatball".
We had a few G.I.'s working
there in the early days. They were not in uniform, since our connection
with the military was secret. One young man, Will Koneker, was stopped by
the police on a minor traffic incident. When he would not answer all the
questions the police asked, he was jailed until his superior officer was
located to vouch for him.
Exchange of information, even
among technical personnel, was strictly on a "need to know" basis. A
memorable occasion was when Dr. Arthur Compton visited Unit III and talked
to some of us in the library. He told us that what we were working on was
in the nature of a secret weapon; that the Germans were working on it
also, and that whoever got it first would win the war. Dr. Lum seemed to
feel that Dr. Compton was revealing too much, and asked some who were
there to go back to their jobs.
One day some of us were
standing in the cafeteria line at Unit I when someone rushed in with a
newspaper. The headline read, "Atom Bomb dropped on Hiroshima". No phone
calls were permitted in or out of the Lab that afternoon, since our
connection with the Manhattan Project was secret. When the second bomb
was dropped on Nagasaki, and the war ended, we who had lived through the
upheaval in the nation and in our personal lives following Pearl Harbor
felt only intense relief. No more killing on either side. My husband,
small daughter and I could live again as a family; my two brothers
fighting in the Pacific were safe.
I felt then, and feel now,
pride in having had a small part in bringing this about.
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