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Arthur Squires

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arthur M. Squires (21 March 1916–18 May 2012) was a chemical engineer and member of the Manhattan Project.[1] He was later on the chemical engineering faculties of the City College of New York and Virginia Tech.[2]

He was a native of Neodesha, Kansas, and died at Blacksburg, Virginia. His first degree was from the University of Missouri; his PhD, in physical chemistry, was awarded by Cornell University.[2]

He also wrote several books, including The Tender Ship, which defends his thesis that governments are usually incompetent managers of technology projects.[3]

Squires's papers are held at Virginia Tech Special Collections and University Archives.[4]

References

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  1. ^ ManhattanProjectVoices.org - Arthur Squires interviews
  2. ^ a b NAP Memorial Tributes vol. 18: obituary
  3. ^ Arthur, Squires (1986). The Tender Ship. Boston: Birkhauser. pp. 1–3.
  4. ^ Virginia Tech Special Collections and University Archives. "Arthur M. Squires Papers, Ms1987-006". Archival Resources of the Virginias. Retrieved July 31, 2024.
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