Louis Budenz Barry Commoner Edward Condon Norman Cousins Lee DuBridge Albert Einstein Stephen Fritchman Gunnar Jahn Willard Libby Robert Oppenheimer Ava Helen Pauling Linus Pauling Bertrand Russell Albert Schweitzer Albert Szent-Györgyi Leó Szilárd Edward Teller Dalton Trumbo Harold Urey Henry A. Wallace Sidney WeinbaumView all Key Participants
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Edward Condon1902-1974
Papers, ca. 1920-1974 Location: American Philosophical Society. Library. Address: 105 South Fifth Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386 Size: ca. 75,000 items (75 linear ft.) Finding Aid: http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/c/condon.xml Phone: 215-440-3400 Fax: 215-440-3423 Web: http://www.amphilsoc.org
Correspondence
Pictures and Illustrations
Manuscript Notes and Typescripts
Quotes
"In short, the greatest contribution to real security that science can make is through the extension of the scientific method
to the social sciences and a solution of the problem of complete avoidance of war."
Edward Condon. "Science and Security," Science, Vol. 107, page 665. June 25, 1948.
"The whole apparatus of using loyalty-security hearings for working off personal political spite has been firmly established
as a part of our 'way of life' and I do not see anything happening yet to loosen the hold of this machinery on us."
Edward Condon. Letter to Linus Pauling. September 8, 1955.
"There has come about a general public awareness that America is not automatically, and effortlessly, and unquestionably the
leader of the world in science and technology....It comes as no surprise to those who have known of dozens of cases of scientists
who have been hounded out of jobs by silly disloyalty charges, and kept out of all professional employment by widespread blacklisting
practices."
Edward Condon. Speech presented at a banquet of the American Physical Society, St. Louis, Missouri. November 29, 1957.
"What, more petitions! Won't you be, and stay, intimidated? You must really annoy Sen. Dodd. Here it is [my signature],
and I hope it does some good."
Edward Condon. Letter to Linus and Ava Helen Pauling. January 17, 1961.
"On May 15, 1957 Linus Pauling made an extraordinary speech to the students of Washington University....It was at this time
that the idea of the scientists' petition against nuclear weapons tests was born. That evening we discussed it at length
after dinner at my house and various ones of those present were scribbling and suggesting paragraphs. But it was Linus Pauling
himself who contributed the simple prose of the petition that was much superior to any of the suggestions we were making."
Edward Condon. Speech titled "The 1962 Nobel Peace Prize," presented at the Unitarian Church, Boulder, Colorado. October 20, 1963. |