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  1. ROBERT SERBER. Robert Serber was born on March 14, 1909, in Philadelphia, into a relatively comfortable Jewish family. On the advice of his uncle who was chief engineer at the Atlantic Refining Company, he enrolled in 1926 at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and majored in engineering physics.

  2. 23 de jun. de 2017 · In 1942, J. Robert Oppenheimer selected Serber to spearhead the project in part because of her lack of librarian experience. He wanted someone who would be willing to bend the rules of cataloguing.

  3. 2 de jun. de 1997 · Dr. Serber and his wife, Charlotte, moved into a room over the garage of Robert and Katherine Oppenheimer's house in Berkeley in April 1942, and they moved to the research center taking shape in ...

  4. Robert serber (elected to the nas in 1952) was one of the leading theorists during the golden age of U.s. physics. He entered graduate school in 19 0 before such key discoveries as the neutron, positron, and deuteron and prior to the development of the principal tool of nuclear and high-energy physics, the particle accelerator.

  5. Manhattan Project scientist Robert Serber, 88, diedSunday, 1 June 1997, at his home on the Upper West Side in Manhattan of complications following surgery for brain cancer. Born March 14, 1909, in Philadelphia, Serber earneda bachelor's degree from Lehigh University inBethlehem, Pa., in 1930 and a doctorate in physics atthe University of ...

  6. Robert Serber died 1 June 1997 following surgery for brain cancer. He was eighty-eight. As his longtime colleague Wolfgang Panofsky said in Serber’s New York Times obituary, “Serber’s talent was being able to comprehend a theory at its widest and narrowest points and to communicate that information to others.”.

  7. Robert Serber Charlotte Serber ( née Leof ; July 26, 1911 – May 22, 1967) was an American journalist , statistician and librarian . She was the librarian of the Manhattan Project 's Los Alamos Laboratory during World War II , and the laboratory's only female group leader.