Below are the first 10 and last 10 pages of uncorrected machine-read text (when available) of this chapter, followed by the top 30 algorithmically extracted key phrases from the chapter as a whole.
Intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text on the opening pages of each chapter.
Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.
Do not use for reproduction, copying, pasting, or reading; exclusively for search engines.
OCR for page 120
OCR for page 120
JOHN M. GOOGIN
1922-1994
BY GEORGE R. JASNY
SUCCESSFUL LARGE-SCALE TECHNICAL ENDEAVORS frequently trace
their success to an indiviclual who, because of an all-encompass-
ing unclerstancling of the key issues, is the vital force driving
the project. John Googin, who died January 16, 1994, was
such an individual.
John was born in Lewiston, Maine, on May 2, 1922, and earned
his B.S. degree in chemistry in 1944 from Bates College in his
hometown. His career, which spanned almost half a century,
started that year when he was employed by the Tennessee East-
man Company, which, as part of the Manhattan Project, operated
the Y-12 Plant in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. There, uranium iso-
topes were separated by the electromagnetic separation process
to produce uranium 235 fuel for the first atomic bomb. John's
first assignment was the daunting task of recovering and recy-
cling the large fraction of precious uranium 235 that was
deposited everywhere except in the product stream. That proved
to be a useful apprenticeship. It gave him a solid grounding in
separation technologies, the chemistry of uranium, and the real-
ities of plant-scale chemical operations. It also establisher! him as
~ Ah Err talent `~7hm was willing to tilde on risky challenges,
at IU1 if 1 ~ ~ ~ ~1 15 ~ 1 ~ ~ ~ ~ in ~ ~ ^~ ~ MA ~ ~ ~
and who could get things clone.
With the end of World War II and the start of the CoIc3 War,
the mission of the Y-12 Plant changed, and its operation was
taken over by Union Carbicle. The electromagnetic separation
121
OCR for page 120
122
MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
process was shut down, replaced by the gaseous diffusion pro-
cess. Y-12 was assigned responsibility for converting the
.
increasing quantities of uranium 235 produced by the gas-
eous diffusion plants into nuclear weapon components and
for recycling large amounts of valuable chemical and metallic
uranium scrap. A new task in the early 1950s was the prepara-
tion of hafnium-free zirconium for the first nuclear submarine
core. Another assignment of major importance during the
1950s was a crash effort to produce large quantities of lithium
6 as fuel for the hydrogen bomb program. Starting in the late
1960s, and continuing through the early 199Os, the advent of
nuclear-tipped missiles and the growing sophistication of nu-
clear weapons technology created a need for increasingly
complex weapon components encompassing a wide range of
ceramic and metallic materials produced to demanding chem-
ical and physical specifications. In each of these efforts,
characteristically conducted under stringent schedule de-
mands and involving thousands of participants representing
many different scientific, engineering, and production skills,
John Googin played a pivotal role.
John had supplemented his not-insignificant scientific
knowledge by obtaining a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from
the University of Tennessee in 1953. He did this while work-
ing full-time on several critical programs and helping his wife,
Janet, whom he had married in 1949, raise the first of their
four daughters. Thus armed, he proceeded to make his mark.
There was a central element common to all of his accom-
plishments: the ability to combine a profound understanding
of materials and their behavior with an unerring sense of what
might work in the factory. Many people in various laborato
. . .
roes, engineering organizations, and production teams have
contributed to the success of the American nuclear weapons
program. None was a better bridge between the thinkers and
the doers; none had a better feel for the elegant, practical
solution. Firmly ensconced in the feedback loop that connect-
ed the physicists' dreams with the realities of production, he
was frequently the final arbiter of what was doable and his
batting average was very high. This effectiveness was enhanced
. .
OCR for page 120
JOHN M. GOOGIN
123
to a significant degree by his ability to communicate with and
inspire the hundreds of average people on whom success ulti-
mately depended. This ability to put complex challenges in
everyday terms, to generate trust, to co-opt people into reach
sing tor yet another level of achievement was every bit as
important as the depth of his technical insights.
One amazing aspect of John's accomplishments is that
they came about without benefit of the authority of
an administrative title. His enormous influence stemmer! solely from
the strength of his arguments and from his unquestioned
success, but that influence, where it mattered, was greater than
that of any of the executives who eagerly sought his advice.
His was a technical man's dream assignment and he macle the
most of it.
John was a man of boundless energy and optimism. If he
was ever discouraged, like most real leaders, he managed to
hide it. The trademark of his persona was laughter: laughter
to celebrate victory in an argument, defuse a tense confronta-
tion, or cheer up the fearful. He was also a man of many
contrasts: a chemist who was one of the finest engineers in the
nuclear weapons program; a man who was always ready to
question or challenge any renowned scientist or powerful ad-
ministrator with whom he disagreed, but who always had time
to listen to the ideas or problems of anyone who brought
them to him; a patriot, who was proud of spending his life
making sure that our nation hac! a credible, reliable nuclear
deterrent en cl who, at the same time, was very active in the
American Civil Liberties Union and in the Unitarian-Univer-
salist Church; a man always willing to voice his opinion on
almost any subject but never indiscreet when dealing with the
many national secrets to which he was privy; a man cursed
with bad feet who was always making rounds, taking the tem-
perature of his beloved processes; and, last but not least, a
man who could argue loudly for hours but who was unfailing-
ly courteous and cheerful toward his protagonists.
Not surprisingly, many awards came his way. At the end of his
working life he was a senior corporate fellow of the Martin
Marietta Corporation, which hacI replaced Union Carbide in
OCR for page 120
124
MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
1984 as manager of the Oak Ridge complex. Along the way he
received the Ernest OrIanclo Lawrence Memorial Award of the
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (1967~; was awarded an
honorary doctor of science degree from Bates College (1968~;
was named a fellow of the American Society for Metals (ASM)
(1974~; received the McGraw Hill Chemical Engineering
Magazine Awarc! for outstanding personal achievement in
chemical engineering (1982~; was awarded the W. J. Troll
Zirconium Meclal (1988~; and received the ASM International
Gold Mecial (1989~. He was elected to the National Academy of
Engineering in 1988 and served on three committees of the
National Research Council. John was not a retiring person and
he enjoyed! this recognition, but the award he doubtless
cherisher! the most was the affection and respect that most of his
associates, high and low, lavished on their beloved "Dr. John."
OCR for page 120