Edward U. Condon Papers
1920-1974
(75 linear feet)

B C752

© American Philosophical Society
105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386

American Philosophical Society

105 South Fifth Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
Table of contents Abstract
Edward Uhler Condon was a theoretical physicist at Princeton University and Westinghouse Laboratories who later served as director of the National Bureau of Standards (1945-1951), and as the director of research and development (1951-1954) and consulting physicist (1954-1974) at Corning Glass Works. The Condon Papers includes correspondence, notebooks, writings, photographs, and other materials concerning Condon's education, teaching, and his government, industrial, and academic.

Included among the more interesting items are an incomplete autobiography, accompanied by scattered recollections of the University of California, Berkeley and Los Alamos in 1943, and a quantity of important material relating to Condon's problems with obtaining security clearances during to late 1940s and 1950s. Information concerning Condon's student and teaching days is included in several books of notes from physics lectures at Berkeley, 1920-1924, and copies of lectures for the classes Condon taught in physics, atomic physics, and quantum mechanics (1931), as well as a separate series of quantum mechanics lecture notes for the 1930s and 1950s.

The security clearance material is diverse, relating not only to Condon but to other scientists and the threat to science in general. Particularly important files include those for the Eastern Industrial Personnel Security Board; exhibits on behalf of Condon; Fowler, Levan, Hawes and Symington (legal counsel); folders on Richard Nixon; Security Investigation; speeches ("The Weakest Link"); U.S. Congress House Special Committee on Un-American Activities; U.S. Department of Commerce Loyalty Board. Condon's personal correspondence with Clifford and Virginia Durr is also rich on this topic, and on politics and social issues of the 1950s.

Miscellaneous material of note includes folders on Condon's involvement with a variety of professional organizations, the Manhattan Project, and with Operation Crossroads, the atomic bomb test at Bikini Atoll, June 30, 1946. The case of J. Robert Oppenheimer is well documented, as is the President's Scientific Board, 1947.
Background note
E. U. Condon with S.E.M.
E. U. Condon with S.E.M.
Born in Alamagordo, New Mexico, on March 2, 1902, E. U. Condon spent a life in theoretical physics that brought him into many of the major developments in the field, from the quantum revolution of the 1920s to the nuclear and electronic revolution of the 1950s and 1960s. Making substantial contributions as a scientist and administrator in academia, industry, and in service to the government, Condon also tasted his fair share of controversy.

After high school, Condon initially set his sights a career in journalism, working at the Oakland Tribune during the summer of 1918 to gain experience, and continuing work on the side when he entered the University of California, Berkeley. While enrolling, dropping out, and re-enrolling from college, however, Condon discovered physics and set off on a different course. Receiving a bachelors degree with highest honors in 1924, he entered into doctoral studies at Berkeley under James Franck, and two years later, after a fevered weekend of work, produced a landmark dissertation. In this dissertation, Condon quantified the effect of light on molecular transitions and established the separability of electronic and vibrational motions in molecules which became known as the Franck-Condon principle.

Following the standard rite of passage for an American student of physics in the early 20th century, Condon accepted a National Research Council fellowship to study in Germany during the fall of 1926 and spring of 1927. Under Max Born and Arnold Sommerfeld at GC6ttingen and Munich, respectively, he applied himself to quantum theory, and after his return to the United States in 1927, took a position in public relations with Bell Telephone Laboratories.

In the spring of 1928, Condon's academic career began in earnest when he was hired as lecturer for two graduate courses at Columbia University (in quantum mechanics and the electromagnetic theory of light). His skill in interpreting the new developments in these areas earned him offers for a permanent position from six different institutions, of which he chose Princeton. He later considered the year 1928-1929 as the most productive of his academic life, capped by his work with R. W. Gurney in the development of the barrier leakage picture of alpha-particle radioactivity and quantum mechanical tunneling. Condon's and Gurney's ideas, which had been brewing simultaneously in the mind of George Gamow, represented the first application of quantum mechanics to the details of atomic structure. At Princeton, he an Philip M. Morse also produced the first English language book on quantum mechanics, Quantum Mechanics(New York: McGraw Hill, 1929).

Thus by the age of 27, Condon had earned a sufficient academic reputation to merit appointment as full professor at the University of Minnesota, though he almost immediately returned to Princeton. In this second stint at Princeton, Condon expanded his research interests to work with Gregory Breit and Richard Present on proton-proton scattering, demonstrating charge independence in the strong nuclear interaction and to early work in mass spectroscopy. His Theory of Atomic Spectra (with G.H. Shortley, 1936) is a classic in the field.

In 1937, Condon left Princeton to begin a new phase in his career -- industry -- when he accepted a position as associate director of research at Westinghouse in Pittsburgh, where he steered the corporation toward work in nuclear energy, and toward a greater emphasis on primary research. With the war looming in 1940, however, Condon moved to the Radiation Laboratory at MIT to work on air-borne radar, and in the winter 1942, was chosen by Robert Oppenheimer to help organize the secret Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, with the hopes that he would apply his experience in mass spectroscopy to the separation of uranium isotopes. Struggling with Leslie Groves, the military head of the laboratory, to maintain his civilian status, Condon returned to Westinghouse to work on microwave radar in 1943 and to the Radiation Laboratory at Berkeley to work on uranium separation.

After the war, Condon was appointed director of the National Bureau of Standards, where he created new divisions in applied mathematics and electronics which collaborated in the development of the first automatically-sequenced high-speed digital computers, and at the same time acted as science advisor to Senator Brian McMahon, chair of the special committee on atomic energy in the Senate. Condon's influence with McMahon was instrumental in the formulation of the McMahon-Douglas bill of August 1946, which established the Atomic Energy Commission, which safeguarded a civilian role in overseeing the development of nuclear energy and weaponry. His public activities drew the unwanted attention of the House Un-American Activities Commission (HUAC), which publicly accused Condon of being a liability for national security.

HUAC Subcommittee members
HUAC Subcommittee members
With the zealous prosecution of Congressman J. Parnell Thomas, head of HUAC, Condon was accused in 1952 of being "one of the weakest links in our atomic security." Condon's security clearance was questioned repeatedly, and exonerated equally often, but HUAC refused to retract its allegations. Despite the absence of evidence against him, Condon was compromised in his ability to perform at the National Bureau of Standards, and therefore resigned to become head of research at Corning Glass Works. Even this, however, did not end his troubles with HUAC. In October 1954, the Secretary of the Navy intervened to have Condon's security clearance revoked in connection with naval research being conducted at Corning. Vice President Richard Nixon hinted in campaign speeches that he had been personally involved in the suspension.

As a result of his on-going struggle with the government, Condon returned to academia, teaching at Oberlin for two years and at Washington University for seven before moving to the University of Colorado as professor of physics and fellow of the Joint Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics.

At Colorado, Condon's security clearance was restored, and he was once again consulted by the government. From 1966 to 1968, he headed a project, "the Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects," undertaken at Colorado by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research to investigate claims of Unidentified Flying Objects. The "Condon Report," issued in 1968, confirmed Condon's prior skepticism with regard to UFOs, although Condon (given sole responsibility for the content of the report) and his researchers were not always in complete agreement. Nevertheless, the negative conclusion was quickly supported by the National Academy of Sciences and contributed to the decision of the Air Force to suspend Project Blue Book.

Even in the most turbulent periods of his career, Condon received the accolades of his peers. He served as president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1953 when he was most beleaguered by HUAC, was president of the Society for Social Responsibility in Science (1968-1969), and chair of the National Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (1970), and he was a member of the National Academy of Sciences (1944), the American Physical Society (President, 1946), and the American Philosophical Society (1949). He died in Boulder in 1974, leaving his wife, Emilie Honzik, and three children.


Scope and content
The Papers of Edward U. Condon document the life and work of one of the

Correspondence, notebooks, writings, photographs, newsclippings, etc., concerning Condon's education, teaching, and his government, industrial and academic work. There is also much interesting material relating to his problems with obtaining security clearances during the late 1940s and 1950s.

The collection includes an interesting but incomplete autobiography, and there are also scattered reflections, such as his recollections of the Univ. of California, Berkeley, and Los Alamos in 1943. Some of the background material and briefs, relating to his security clearance, provide detailed biographical information.

Concerning his own writings, there are copies of many addresses, articles, books (9 boxes relating to his Handbook of Physics) and such interesting items as the Los Alamos Primer, which is a detailed technical description of the project, written for the scientists who were arriving there.

Information concerning Condon's student and teaching days includes several notebooks for physics lectures at Berkeley, 1920-1924, and there are course materials (lectures) for classes he taught in physics, atomic physics, and quantum mechanics (1931). There is a separate series of quantum mechanics lecture notes for the 1930s and 1950s.

The security clearance material is diverse, relating not only to Condon but to other scientists and to what they percevied as the more general threat posed to science. Among the more important files are those for the Eastern Industrial Personnel Security Board; the exhibits on behalf of Condon; Fowler, Levan, Hawes & Symington (legal counsel); Richard Nixon; Security Investigation; and speeches: :The Weakest Link:; U.S. Congress. House Special Committee on Un-American Activities; and U.S. Dept. of Commerce. Loyalty Board. The personal correspondence with Clifford and Virginia Durr is also rich on this topic, and on politics and social issues of the 1950s.

Condon's participation in a number of professional organizations is well, including the American Association for the Advance of Science; American Physical Society; American-Soviet Science Society; Corning Glass Works; Federation of American Scientists; SANE; Society for Social Responsibility in Science; U.S. Atomic Energy Commission; U.S. Dept. of Commerce, National Bureau of Standards (Condon was the Director); University of Colorado; Washington University; and Westinghouse Electric Corp.

Miscellaneous material of note includes folders on the Manhattan Project and an interesting journal, filed with his notebooks, kept during Operation Crossroads, the atomic bomb test conducted on Bikini Atoll on June 30, 1946. There is much on the Robert Oppenheimer case, and also a series on the President's Scientific Board, 1947.

Series I. Correspondence, 1931-1991 (7 boxes; 3.25 linear feet)
Series II. Notebooks and diaries, 1922-1946 (3 boxes; 1.25 linear feet)
Series III. Miscellaneous materials, 1936-1971 (1 box; 0.5 linear feet)
Series IV. Photographs (1 box; 0.5 linear feet)
Series V. UFO materials (33 boxes; 16.5 linear feet)
Series VI. Printed materials (11 boxes; 5.5 linear feet)

Administrative information
Restrictions
None.

Provenance
The Condon Papers were deposited at the APS Library by the Estate of Edward Uhler Condon in 1974.

Preferred citation
Cite as: Edward Uhler Condon Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Processing information
Catalogued by Lois Fischbeck, 1998.

Additional information
Separated material
Printed materials have been transferred to the Printed Materials Department, and can be located through the Library's OPAC, VOLE, and are noted as being "From the estate of E. U. Condon." Please consult a librarian for assistance.

Related material
The APS houses several collections that document the history of the development of the atomic bomb, including the papers of Henry DeWolf Smyth, Stanislaw M. Ulam, and John A. Wheeler for the physics of A-bomb development, and Curt Stern and James V. Neel relating to the genetics. The APS also houses two collections relating to the investigation of UFO sightings, namely the papers of Philip J. Klass, and Donald Howard Menzel.

Added entries
Subjects
  • American Association for the Advancement of Science
  • American Physical Society
  • American-Soviet Science Society
  • Atomic bomb--United States
  • Bikini Atoll (Pacific Islands)
  • Corning Glass Works
  • Eastern Industrial Personnel Security Board
  • Federation of American Scientists
  • Fowler, Levan, Hawes & Symington
  • Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory
  • Nuclear physics--Research--United States
  • Nuclear weapons--Testing
  • Operation Crossroads, 1946
  • Physics--Research--United States
  • Physics--Study and teaching
  • Quantum theory
  • SANE, Inc.
  • Society for Social Responsibility in Science (ACT)
  • United States--Politics and government--1945-
  • United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Manhattan District
  • United States. Atomic Energy Commission
  • United States. Congress. House. Special Committee on Un-American Activities
  • United States. Department of Commerce. Loyalty Board
  • United States. National Bureau of Standards
  • University of California, Berkeley
  • University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Washington University (Saint Louis, Mo.)
  • Westinghouse Electric Corporation
  • Contributors
  • Bethe, Hans Albrecht, 1906-
  • Birge, Raymond Thayer, 1887-1980
  • Boas, Ernst Philip, 1891-1955
  • Branscomb, Lewis M., 1926-
  • Breit, Gregory, 1899-
  • Briggs, Lyman J., b. 1874
  • Bronk, Detlev Wulf, 1897-1975
  • Chubb, Lewis Warrington, b. 1882
  • Compton, Arthur Holly, 1892-1962
  • Condon, Edward Uhler, 1902-1974
  • Courant, Richard, 1888-1972
  • David, Nathan H
  • DuBridge, Lee A. (Lee Alvin), 1901-
  • Durr, Clifford J. (Clifford Judkins), 1899-1975
  • Durr, Virginia Foster
  • Gamow, George, 1904-1968
  • Gurney-Taylor, Natalie
  • Kamen, Martin David, 1913-
  • Loeb, Leonard B. (Leonard Benedict), 1891-
  • Menzel, Donald Howard, 1901-
  • Meyerhoff, Howard A. (Howard Augustus), 1899-
  • Morley, Robert H
  • Newman, James Roy, 1907-1966
  • Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-
  • Norberg, Richard E
  • Oppenheimer, Frank, 1912-
  • Oppenheimer, J. Robert, 1904-1967
  • Pake, G. E. (George Edward)
  • Pauling, Linus, 1901-
  • Phelps, John B., 1929-
  • Phillips, Melba, 1907-
  • Rabi, I. I. (Isidor Isaac), 1898-
  • Roberts, Walter O., 1915-
  • Seitz, Frederick, 1911-
  • Shortley, George, 1910-
  • Teller, Edward, 1908-
  • Truman, Harry S., 1884-1972
  • Urey, Harold Clayton, 1893-1981
  • Veblen, Oswald, 1880-1960
  • Visscher, Maurice B., 1901-
  • Weaver, Warren, 1894-1978
  • Genre terms
  • Autobiographies
  • Journals (notebooks)
  • Lectures
  • Notebooks
  • Photoprints
  • Speeches
  • Contact information
    American Philosophical Society
    105 South Fifth Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
    [http://www.amphilsoc.org/]

    ©2001


    Collection overview

    Series I. Correspondence 1931-1992 128 boxes, 64 lin. feet

    Consists mainly of correspondence to Condon, arranged alphabetically. The Series also contains various papers, addresses, and drafts of works by Condon and others.




    Series II. Notebooks and diaries 1922-1946 3 boxes, 1.25 lin. foot

    Is comprised of various diaries and date books of Condon, as well as notebooks from different courses, and projects (most notably the Bikini Atoll tests).




    Series III. Miscellaneous materials 1936-1971 2 boxes, 0.75 lin. foot

    Includes miscellaneous files added to the collection at a later date, along with a small assortment of medals awarded to Condon and identification badges.




    Series IV. Photographs 1922-1946 1 box, 0.5 lin. foot

    Various personal and professional photographs of Condon, no detailed inventory currently available.




    Series V. UFO materials 1922-1946 33 boxes, 16.5 lin. feet

    Files and documents from Condon's work on Operation Blue Book for the United States Air Force. No detailed inventory currently available.




    Series VI. Printed materials 1922-1946 11 boxes, 5.5 lin. feet

    A few miscellaneous printed items. No detailed inventory currently available.



    Detailed inventory

    Series I. Correspondence 1920-1974 128 boxes, 64 linear feet

    Abbott, Mary K.

    Box 1

    Abelson, Philip H. - Science in the Seventies

    Box 1

    Abrams, Jill

    Box 1

    Academic Press, Inc.

    Box 1

    Academy for Educational Development, Inc.

    Box 1

    Academy of Science of St. Louis

    Box 1

    Academy of Sciences, U.S.S.R.

    Box 1

    Acree, S. F.

    Box 1

    AD-X2 Battery Additive Case
    13 folders Box 1

    Addison-Wesley Publishing Company

    Box 1

    Adomian, George

    Box 1

    Agnew, Spiro T.

    Box 1

    Agronsky, Martin

    Box 1

    Aharonov, Yakir - Time Symmetry in the Quantum Process of Measurement

    Box 1

    Ahmedabad Textile Industry's Research Association

    Box 1

    Air Pollution

    Box 1

    Albert, Frieda

    Box 1

    Alexander, Sam[uel] N.

    Box 1

    Alexander, William M.

    Box 1

    Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.

    Box 1

    Alfred University

    Box 1

    All Saints' Episcopal Church [Chevy Chase, Md.]

    Box 1

    Allen, Alex

    Box 1

    Allen, Dean A.

    Box 1

    Allen, Harper

    Box 1

    Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation. The Solvay Process Division.

    Box 1

    Allison, David

    Box 1

    Almond, Stephen W.

    Box 1

    Alpha Chi Sigma

    Box 1

    Alsop, Joseph

    Box 1

    Alvarez, Luis W.

    Box 1

    Aly, Hadi H.

    Box 1

    American Academy of Arts and Sciences
    4 folders Box 1

    American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Bulletin
    6 folders Box 1

    American Association for the Advancement of Science
    46 folders Box 1

    American Association for the Advancement of Science (continued from Box 1)

    Box 2

    American Association for the Advancement of Science. Publications Committee

    Box 2

    American Association for the Advancement of Science - British Association for the Advancement of Science. Science and the Future. April 13-19, 1969
    7 folders Box 2

    American Association for the Advancement of Science - British Association for the Advancement of Science. Science.... Miscellany
    2 folders Box 2

    American Association for the Advancement of Science - British Association for the Advancement of Science. Science.... Papers
    4 folders Box 2

    American Association of Land-Grant Colleges and State Universities

    Box 2

    American Association of Physics Teachers
    11 folders Box 3

    American Association of Scientific Workers

    Box 3

    American Association of University Professors

    Box 3

    American Ceramic Society, Inc.

    Box 3

    American Chemical Society
    2 folders Box 3

    American Civil Liberties Union
    12 folders Box 3

    American Committee for Emigré Scholars, Writers and Artists, Inc.

    Box 3

    American Committee for the Weizmann Institute of Science

    Box 3

    American Congress on Surveying and Mapping

    Box 3

    American Friends Fellowship Council, and Friends World Committee, American Section

    Box 3

    American Friends Service Committee
    6 folders Box 3

    American Geophysical Union

    Box 3

    American Institute of Chemical Engineers

    Box 3

    American Institute of Electrical Engineers

    Box 3

    American Institute of France

    Box 3

    American Institute of Physics
    3 folders Box 3

    American Journal of Physics

    Box 3

    American Philosophical Society
    9 folders Box 4

    American Physical Society
    26 folders Box 4

    American Russian Institute

    Box 4

    American Scholar

    Box 4

    American Society for Engineering Education

    Box 4

    American Society for Metals

    Box 4

    American Society for Quality Control
    2 folders Box 4

    American Society for Technion

    Box 4

    American Society for Testing Materials

    Box 4

    American Society for the Advancement of the Hebrew Institute of Technology in Haifa, Palestine

    Box 4

    American Society of Civil Engineers

    Box 4

    American Society of Mechanical Engineers

    Box 4

    American-Soviet Friendship, Inc.
    3 folders Box 4

    American-Soviet Science Society
    24 folders Box 5

    American Standards Association

    Box 5

    American Statistical Association

    Box 5

    American University

    Box 5

    American Veterans Committee

    Box 5

    Americans for Democratic Action

    Box 5

    Amlauer, Karl

    Box 5

    Ancizar-Sordo, Jorge

    Box 5

    Anderson, David L.

    Box 5

    Anderson, David L. The Electronic Charge and Avogadro's Number

    Box 5

    Anderson Kramer Associates, Inc.

    Box 5

    Ando, Tsuyoshi. Properties of Fermion Density Matrices
    2 folders Box 5

    Annual Reviews, Inc.
    27 folders Box 5

    Annual Reviews, Inc. (continued from Box 5)

    Box 6

    Anslow, W. Parker, Jr.

    Box 6

    Anti-Ballistic Missile - Point of No Return?

    Box 6

    Anti-Ballistic Missile System
    6 folders Box 6

    Aranow, R. H. - Radiocarbon Dating: The Nitrogen Error

    Box 6

    Argonne National Laboratory

    Box 6

    Armistead, William H.
    2 folders Box 6

    Armour Research Foundation

    Box 6

    Armstrong Cork Company

    Box 6

    Armstrong, Lloyd

    Box 6

    Armstrong, Richard A.

    Box 6

    Army Medical Center

    Box 6

    Arnberg, Carl Oscar

    Box 6

    Arnold, Fortas & Porter
    3 folders Box 6

    Arnold, Samuel, 3rd

    Box 6

    Arnott, E. G. F.

    Box 6

    Arons, Arnold

    Box 6

    Aronson

    Box 6

    Ashby, Lyle W.

    Box 6

    Ashby, N. Report on Feasibility Study on Solar Heating of Denver Community College North Campus Classroom Building.

    Box 6

    Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies

    Box 6

    Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies. Report
    3 folders Box 6

    Association for Computing Machinery

    Box 6

    Association of Los Alamos Scientists

    Box 6

    Association of Pittsburgh [PA] Scientists

    Box 6

    Association of World Colleges and Universities

    Box 6

    Astin, Allen V.

    Box 6

    Astin, Margaret [Mrs. Allen V.]

    Box 6

    Astronomical Society of the Pacific

    Box 6

    Atchison, F. Stanley

    Box 6

    Atkins, Kenneth R.

    Box 6

    Atomic Energy
    56 folders Box 6

    Atomic Energy (continued from Box 6)

    Box 7

    Atomic Energy. Ban of Nuclear Weapons
    6 folders Box 7

    Atomic Energy. Chronological Highlights of the Atomic Bomb Project.

    Box 7

    Atomic Energy. Congressional Legislation, 1945
    6 folders Box 7

    Atomic Energy. Congressional Legislation, 1946
    15 folders Box 7

    Atomic Energy. Congressional Legislation, 1946 (continued from Box 7)

    Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Congressional Legislation, 1953

    Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Congressional Legislation, 1954
    7 folders Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Control Conference
    4 folders Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Control - International
    17 folders Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Essential Information on ...

    Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Glossary of Important Terms in Nuclear Physics.

    Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Operation Crossroads
    3 folders Box 8

    Atomic Energy. Suspension of Tests.
    2 folders Box 8

    Atomic Energy. United Nations Atomic Energy Commission. Report to the Security Council, Sept. 1947

    Box 8

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Congressional Hearings, May 1949

    Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Congressional Hearings, June 1949
    15 folders Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Congressional Hearings, July 1949
    6 folders Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. House. Hearings, Oct. 1945

    Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. House. Hearings, May, June 1963
    2 folders Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Bills for the Development and Control of Atomic Energy.

    Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Hearings, Dec. 1945
    3 folders Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Hearings, Jan. 1946
    2 folders Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Hearings, Feb. 1946
    2 folders Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Hearings, Apr. 1946

    Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Hearings, May 1949

    Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Hearings, June 1959

    Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U.S. Senate. Special Committee on Atomic Energy
    22 folders Box 9

    Atomic Energy. U. S. Senate. Special Committee on Atomic Energy (continued from Box 9)

    Box 10

    Atomic Energy. The United States Strategic Bombing Survey. The Effects of Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    Box 10

    Atomic Energy. University of Chicago Metallurgical Laboratory
    6 folders Box 10

    Atomic Energy Commission

    Box 10

    See: U. S. Atomic Energy Commission


    Atomic Energy Documentation Service, Inc.

    Box 10

    Atomic Energy of Canada, Ltd.

    Box 10

    Atomic Magnitudes
    2 folders Box 10

    Atomic Structure (Encycl. Brit.)
    6 folders Box 10

    Augsburg College

    Box 10

    Auton, Jesse

    Box 10

    Auville, René

    Box 10

    B- - - - -, Sandy

    Box 10

    Bacher, Robert F.

    Box 10

    Bacher, Robert F. The Hydrogen Bomb

    Box 10

    Bailey, Joyce

    Box 10

    Bainbridge, K. T.

    Box 10

    Baja California Astronomical Observatory

    Box 10

    Baker, C. L.

    Box 10

    Ball, William P.

    Box 10

    Baring, John A.

    Box 10

    Barry, Mrs. Scammon

    Box 10

    Barth, Alan

    Box 10

    Barth, C. A. L. Wallace, and J. B. Pearce. Mariner 5 - Measurement of Lyman Alpha Radiation on Venus

    Box 10

    Barton, Henry A.

    Box 10

    Baruch, Bernard M.

    Box 10

    Barut, A. O. Calculation of Relativistic Transition Probabilities and Form Factors from Non-Compact Groups

    Box 10

    Barut, A. O. Current Operators and Majorana Equation for the Hydrogen Atom from Dynamical Groups

    Box 10

    Barut, A. O. The Nature of the Nuclear Bond and the Structure of Hadrons

    Box 10

    Basic Books, Inc.
    2 folders Box 10

    Bates, A. Allan
    2 folders Box 10

    Battelle Memorial Institute

    Box 10

    Beadle, George W.

    Box 10

    Beams, J. W.

    Box 10

    Beane, Don

    Box 10

    Beaser, Herbert Wilton

    Box 10

    Beaty, Earl C.

    Box 10

    Beck, Donald Richardson
    5 folders Box 10

    Beck, Donald R. Configuration Interaction in the T1 II Spectrum

    Box 10

    Beck, Donald R. A Relativistic Calculation for Some Optical Levels

    Box 11

    Beck, Lawrence T.

    Box 11

    Beckers, Jacques M.

    Box 11

    Beeman, David E., Jr.

    Box 11

    Behar, M. F.

    Box 11

    Behm, Forrest

    Box 11

    Behnke, John A.

    Box 11

    Belknap, William J.

    Box 11

    Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania

    Box 11

    Bell type generator
    6 folders Box 11

    Beltrani, Alvaro V.

    Box 11

    Benedict, William

    Box 11

    Benjamin, W. A., Inc.
    28 folders Box 11

    Benjamin, W. A., Inc. (continued from Box 11)

    Box 12

    Benne, Kenneth

    Box 12

    Bennett, John C., Jerald Brauer, Marice Eisendrath, John Wesley, and Paul Tillich

    Box 12

    Bennett, Rawson

    Box 12

    Bennison, B. E.

    Box 12

    Benson, P. H.

    Box 12

    Benton, William

    Box 12

    Bercaw, Roberto and Ruth

    Box 12

    Bercaw, Ruth B.

    Box 12

    Berg, Ellison J.

    Box 12

    Berg, Sigurd

    Box 12

    Bergmann, Peter G.

    Box 12

    Bergmann, Peter G. Radiation and Observables

    Box 12

    Berkeley [Cal.] Society of Friends

    Box 12

    Bernick, Richard J.

    Box 12

    Bersohn, Richard

    Box 12

    Beta Kappa Chi Scientific Society

    Box 12

    Beth, Richard A.

    Box 12

    Bethe, Hans A.

    Box 12

    Betz, Fred M.

    Box 12

    Bevan, George H.

    Box 12

    Bhabha, H. J.

    Box 12

    Bhatnagar, Shanti S.

    Box 12

    Bhatnagar-Saha Visit, 1944-1945

    Box 12

    Bibliography of works by Condon
    2 folders Box 12

    Bibliography of the Franck-Condon Principle

    Box 12

    Biddle, Francis

    Box 12

    Biermann, Ludwig

    Box 12

    Bijur, George

    Box 12

    Billings, Donald E. Problems of the Solar Corona

    Box 12

    Biographical Materials
    5 folders Box 12

    Biological Abstracts

    Box 12

    Birge, Raymond T.
    2 folders Box 12

    Birge, Raymond T. History of the Physics Dept.,U. of Cal.
    5 folders Box 12

    Birmingham, Bascom

    Box 12

    Black, Hugo. We Dissent

    Box 12

    Blackett, P. M. S. The Ever Widening Gap

    Box 12

    Blackwelder, Richard E.

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    Blackwell, H. Richard

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    Blaisdell, Warren

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    Blewett, John P.

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    Blitzer, Leon

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    Blizard, J. B. Long-Range Solar-Flare Prediction

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    Blizard, J. B. Solar Activity and Planetary Positions

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    Bloch, Emanuel H.

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    Bloch, Felix

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    Blomfield, Jane Seymour

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    Bloom, Abe

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    Blyholder, George

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    Boas, Ernst P.

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    Boas, George

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    Boekel, William A.

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    Bohm, David

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    Bohr, Niels Henrik David

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    Bok, Bart J.

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    See Coryell, Charles D.


    Bolef, Dan

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    Bolton, Wilbur W., Jr.

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    Book Advertisements

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    Bookbinder, Isidore J.

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    Bork, Alfred M. Collateral Reading for Physics Courses

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    Born, Max

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    Born, Max. Man and the Atom

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    Bos, Mrs. T.

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    Boulder [Colo.] Rotary Club

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    Boulder [Colo.] Sane Nuclear Committee

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    Bowdoin College

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    Bowen, Presley D.

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    Bowen, Roger W.

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    Bowles, Chester

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    Bradbury, Norris E.

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    Bradley, W. H.

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    Bradley, William L.

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    Brahdy, Mrs. Leopold.

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    See: Rees, Mina


    Brahdy, M. R.

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    Branch, John

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    Braniff International Airways

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    Branscomb, Anne

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    Branscomb, Lewis McAdory
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    Branscomb, Mrs. Lewis McAdory

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    Brasefield, Charles J.

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    Brauer, Jerald.

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    See: Bennett, John C. et al.


    Breit, Gregory

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    Brewer, A. Keith

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    Brewer, A. Keith. The Dissociation of Hydrocarbon Molecules upon Ionization as Shown by the Mass Spectrometer.

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    Brickwedde, F. G.

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    Bridgers and Paxton Consulting Engineers. Feasibility Study of Solar Heating...Denver Community College
    3 folders Box 13

    Bridgman, P. W.