Abstract.
Physicist Lee A. DuBridge became president of the California Institute of Technology in 1946. In this interview he recalls the immediate problems he faced, including his dealings with Robert A. Millikan, whom he replaced as chief administrator of the institute; institute financing and inadequate salaries. DuBridge also talks about the advent of federal support for peacetime science and Millikan's distaste for it; his close working relationship with Robert F. Bacher, who came to the institute in 1949 as chairman of the Division of Physics, Mathematics, and Astronomy; his recollections of the meteorologist Irving P. Krick, the physicist Alexander Goetz, and the chemist Linus Pauling; and his attempts to build up the Humanities Division.
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ID="*"Judith R. Goodstein is faculty associate in history and university archivist at the California Institute of Technology.
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Goodstein, J. A Conversation with Lee Alvin DuBridge – Part I. Phys. perspect. 5, 174–205 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00016-003-0144-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00016-003-0144-4
- Key words. Lee A. DuBridge; Robert F. Bacher; Robert A. Millikan; Charles C. Lauritsen; Earnest Watson; Irving P. Krick; Linus Pauling; Ira S. Bowen; Max Mason; physics history; Caltech.