Camp EvansOral HistoriesInterviewee: Samuel SteinInterviewer: Michael RuaneDate: 1998? Place: Camp Evans - 9039 Media: NTSC Video Summary: Mr. Irv Bauman |
SAM STINE, PHYSICIST (Cont'd from Tape 2)
Sam returned to continue his exposition of his experiences at Evans.
He began with an anecdote about a Washington D.C. happening. Here, he was
invited to attend a dinner party there, and found himself seated next to
Mrs. Jackie Kennedy. She was pregnant at that time and, in the course of
table talk, found her to be the coldest person. He felt that her husband,
who was also present, was a ruthless politician, wanting only
to win when running, and at any cost. He even involved Nuns, to help
in his campaigns.
Sam identified Jim Goodin, who ran Meteorogical Branch, as a brilliant
man. It seems that Jim & Pres. Harry Truman attended grade school,
high school & college together, and became good friends. Jim was welcome
at the White House to visit Harry & Bess Truman. Sam accompanied Jim
on several occasions on these visits, meeting Bess & Harry. Jim had
worked On Weather Instrumentation at USAF at Dayton, Ohio. He was a good
physicist and a fair mathematician. He displayed drive when tackling an
assigned problem. At the White House, Jim spoke to Truman about his work
in Meteorology.
Sam traveled in aircraft extensively, having made 40 flights, some
which featured wild turbulence and resulted in injury to passengers. On
one flight where 3 nurses were aboard, one engine caught fire and a crew
chief hurt his neck. The nurses treated him until they landed at Fort Dix,
NJ where he was taken to their hospital. Sam experienced several aircraft
landing problems, as well as 14 crashes, during his Air Corps service.
He served there as Chief Inspection Forecaster, the 9th Weather Reconnaissance,
assigned a Weather Station which covered the Caribbean thru to the Galigapos
Island areas.
Sam next indicated that with his assignment to Project Cirrus, he experienced
four crashes in aircraft and simply wanted out. He had 4 children and felt
they certainly needed their father.
In the Midwest, rain was badly needed to grow corn. Under Project Cirrus
to which he was assigned, the clouds were seeded, but in the mountains,
the snowfall had increased excessively. To see a cloud, the dry ice had
to be placed at a special point in the cloud to be effective. If done properly,
heavy condensation would result. A typical cloud seeding mission would
cost $20,000 for the use of the plane, plus the cost of a man.
Sam got involved in bulding 32 detectors, then built 2 Radar
Systems. The second and more powerful would pick up signals more than 3
miles away. He had a Laser Radar whilch could pick up smoke from a cigarette,
a very useful tool in Vietnam and buillt by Honeywell. Later USAF used
it for perimeter protection. Sam started his work specialty before the
war and continued after the war end. He worked in Bldg 37, Evans. He developed
a laser that picks up cloud particle movement. He knew Ratheon, Boston
had a Laser Gun, so he rushed up to Boston, pointed the gun over their
parking lot and found that all the people on the ground there could be
picked up. Based on that capability, Sam's group had a unit built thru
Honeywell, a pistol radar covering one mile that would pick up anything
that moves.
Sam spoke of two especially useful men working with him, one who lives
in Lakewood, NJ and ran his temperature lab; the other effective in an
aircraft. One of his men, later on, joined the Einstein group in
Princeton. Though his speech and writing were especially poor, he proved
extremely useful to his group. He would type rather than write his thoughts.
Sam worked thru Dr. Ziegler, a brilliant man, who displayed the typical
German arrogance. Sam was always traveling around in the course of his
work yet, Jim wouldn't hound him upon his return.
One experience he recalled, traveling to the West to witness the explosion
of 100,000 lbs. of explosives where he had to measure the resulting wave
forms and temperature. This explosion nowhere approached the White Sands
Explosion.
Phases of Project Cirrus were classified for many years. Once someone
pumped his 4 yr. old daughter for information. Sam hates jounalists, who
report incorrectly.
Sam enjoyed his work thoroughly. That work was appreciated and it directly
helped the soldier in the field. His advice to young people: learn to type
early. Sam works his computer 6 hrs/day. He feels computers should be used
for computing not dating. He has a 200 megacycle computer on his desk.
He met several meteorologists on the Internet, acquiring data from them,
using intuition to supplement what he found out. He wished he could return
to his past work today.
Radar contributed to Met. Branch programs. Project Cirrus measured
droplet size. A Canadian Mathematician worked out a method for this form
of measurement. Sam headed committees to include
representatives from USAF, National Bureau of Standards, Dep't of Commerce
& Weather Bureau. He had involvement with the use of IR detectors,
the perimeter sensors used in Vietnam.
Sam was frequently approached by foreign countries for information
but he responded only to those who coordinated with the State Dep't. Sam
worked on many highly classified projects. He identified the
Thunder Lightening Bold Project with the University of New Mexico,
studying electrical characteristics.. The White House paid for the the
related flights, paying one million dollars a day for a flight, and $40,000
/day if none were made. Part of the project was to direct the energy of
an exploding bomb.
All research today, he remarks, goes to industry from whom information
easily gets to the enemy. He further remarks that, in S.E.Asia, each group
is killing the other and U.S.Soldiers are sent there to try to control
their actions. In the past, the Pentagon maintained a status board of all
curent data; today, information travels in seconds. There are no heroes
in a war that is fought by killing every enemy man, woman, and child.
60 min.
Page updated January 2, 2004
Page created August 2, 2002