| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Military Affairs - Cartels - 1943 - 136 pages
...favorable action. My only question is whether there are safeguards for existing agencies such as the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the National Defense Research Committee. I hope there will be no new competing bodies that will obscure and duplicate function. After the Civil... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Military Affairs - 1945 - 94 pages
...research given a secondary place until time permits it to be given more emphasis. The formation of the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the National Defense Research Committee mobilized the scientific talent of the country which was not already employed at the various Government... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Military Affairs - Military research - 1945 - 96 pages
...research given a secondary place until time permits it to be given more emphasis. The formation of the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the National Defense Research Committee mobilized the scientific talent of the country which was not already employed at the various Government... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations - 1948 - 1334 pages
...national emergency. (6) The conservation of many scientific resources created during the war by the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the National Defense Research Committee. (c) The retention of an active interest on the part of the scientist in problems of national security.... | |
| William Henry Plant - Draft - 1951 - 52 pages
...especially civilian scientific personnel of the Navy Department. Refers particularly to the personnel of the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the National Defense Research Committee which was then in process of being disbanded. Makes recommendations for changes in present legislation,... | |
| Science - 2000 - 376 pages
...energy to the government's attention, nor the scientific leaders of mammoth organizations like the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the National Defense Research Committee, which had overseen early work on the bomb, were accorded a voice in deciding the weapon's fate once... | |
| Clarence L. Mohr, Joseph E. Gordon - History - 2001 - 546 pages
...from the multivolume series Science in Vt orld War H. which describes the work of all divisions of the Office of Scientific Research and Development and the National Defense Research Committee. For an assessment of OSRD's postwar significance, see Adam Yarmolinsky, The Military Establishment:... | |
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