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The Ultimate Geotechnical Engineering Challenge - Intro and Background |
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Written by Ed Nowatzki
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Monday, 28 May 2007 |
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Page 5 of 5
Prologue
I have very fond memories of those days and the excitement that
surrounded one of mankinds greatest achievements. To this day I cherish the commemorative pins
shown in Figure 7 that Grummans management gave to their employees. I left Grumman in 1972, about the time
funding for the Apollo and Post-Apollo Programs was being substantially
cut. To make a bad pun, it did not take
a rocket scientist to figure out that, with NASAs lunar landing and
exploration programs being phased out, the days of a geotechnical engineer in
the employment of an aircraft manufacturer were numbered. Fortunately, I was able to obtain a position
with a geotechnical engineering consultant in New Jersey and get back to earth so-to-speak. That position was the beginning of a
career that has involved entirely different types of geotechnical engineering
challenges almost every day, but none as great as the one described above. It was the ultimate challenge, period!
By the way, I never took a course during my entire
academic career through the Ph.D. that covered any of the topics discussed in
this essay. Neither did Les Karafiath.

Figure 7
Commemorative pins distributed to employees of
Grumman Aerospace Corporation
Left Lapel pin given to personnel of Grummans
Apollo Project.
Right Pin signifying the lunar contact
light on the LM given to all Grumman employees.
Acknowledgement
The
author wishes to acknowledge Dr. Naresh C. Samtani, PE, PhD, President of NCS
Consultants, LLC, for his effort in reviewing this article and providing
comments.
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Last Updated ( Monday, 04 June 2007 )
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