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=== National Science Foundation === The OSRD continued to function actively until some time after the end of hostilities, but by 1946–1947 it had been reduced to a minimal staff charged with finishing work remaining from the war period; Bush was calling for its closure even before the war had ended. During the war, the OSRD had issued contracts as it had seen fit, with just eight organizations accounting for half of its spending. MIT was the largest to receive funds, with its obvious ties to Bush and his close associates. Efforts to obtain legislation exempting the OSRD from the usual government [[conflict of interest]] regulations failed, leaving Bush and other OSRD principals open to prosecution. Bush therefore pressed for OSRD to be wound up as soon as possible.{{sfn|Zachary|1997|pp=246–249}} With its dissolution, Bush and others had hoped that an equivalent peacetime government research and development agency would replace the OSRD. Bush felt that basic research was important to national survival for both military and commercial reasons, requiring continued government support for science and technology; technical superiority could be a [[Deterrence theory|deterrent]] to future enemy aggression. In ''Science, The Endless Frontier'', a July 1945 report to the president, Bush maintained that basic research was "the pacemaker of technological progress". "New products and new processes do not appear full-grown," Bush wrote in the report. "They are founded on new principles and new conceptions, which in turn are painstakingly developed by research in the purest realms of science!"<ref>{{cite web |title=Science the Endless Frontier: A Report to the President by Vannevar Bush, Director of the Office of Scientific Research and Development |date=July 1945 |access-date=April 22, 2012 |publisher=[[National Science Foundation]] |url=https://www.nsf.gov/about/history/vbush1945.htm}}</ref> In Bush's view, the "purest realms" were the physical and medical sciences; he did not propose funding the [[social science]]s.{{sfn|Greenberg|2001|pp=44–45}} In ''Science, The Endless Frontier'', science historian [[Daniel Kevles]] later wrote, Bush "insisted upon the principle of Federal patronage for the advancement of knowledge in the United States, a departure that came to govern Federal science policy after World War II."{{sfn|Greenberg|2001|p=52}} [[File:Truman, Bush and Conant.jpg|thumb|left|Bush (left) with [[Harry S. Truman]] (center) and [[James B. Conant]] (right)|alt=three men in suits. The one on the right is wearing a medal.]] In July 1945, the Kilgore bill was introduced in Congress, proposing the appointment and removal of a single science administrator by the president, with emphasis on applied research, and a patent clause favoring a government monopoly. In contrast, the competing Magnuson bill was similar to Bush's proposal to vest control in a panel of top scientists and civilian administrators with the executive director appointed by them. The Magnuson bill emphasized basic research and protected private patent rights.{{sfn|Zachary|1997|pp=253–256}} A compromise Kilgore–Magnuson bill of February 1946 passed the Senate but expired in the House because Bush favored a competing bill that was a virtual duplicate of Magnuson's original bill.{{sfn|Zachary|1997|p=328}} A Senate bill was introduced in February 1947 to create the National Science Foundation (NSF) to replace the OSRD. This bill favored most of the features advocated by Bush, including the controversial administration by an autonomous scientific board. The bill passed the Senate and the House, but was [[pocket veto]]ed by Truman on August 6, on the grounds that the administrative officers were not properly responsible to either the president or Congress.{{sfn|Zachary|1997|p=332}} The OSRD was abolished without a successor organization on December 31, 1947.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.archives.gov/research/guide-fed-records/groups/227.html |publisher=[[National Archives and Records Administration]] |title=Records of the Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) |access-date=May 21, 2012}}</ref> Without a [[National Science Foundation]], the military stepped in, with the [[Office of Naval Research]] (ONR) filling the gap. The war had accustomed many scientists to working without the budgetary constraints imposed by pre-war universities.{{sfn|Hershberg|1993|p=397}} Bush helped create the Joint Research and Development Board (JRDB) of the Army and Navy, of which he was chairman. With passage of the [[National Security Act of 1947|National Security Act]] on July 26, 1947, the JRDB became the Research and Development Board (RDB). Its role was to promote research through the military until a bill creating the National Science Foundation finally became law.{{sfn|Zachary|1997|pp=318–323}} By 1953, the [[United States Department of Defense|Department of Defense]] was spending $1.6 billion a year on research; physicists were spending 70 percent of their time on defense related research, and 98 percent of the money spent on physics came from either the Department of Defense or the [[United States Atomic Energy Commission|Atomic Energy Commission]] (AEC), which took over from the Manhattan Project on January 1, 1947.{{sfn|Hershberg|1993|pp=305–309}} Legislation to create the [[National Science Foundation]] finally passed through Congress and was signed into law by Truman in 1950.{{sfn|Zachary|1997|pp=368–369}} The authority that Bush had as chairman of the RDB was much different from the power and influence he enjoyed as director of OSRD and would have enjoyed in the agency he had hoped would be independent of the Executive branch and Congress. He was never happy with the position and resigned as chairman of the RDB after a year, but remained on the oversight committee.{{sfn|Zachary|1997|pp=336–345}} He continued to be skeptical about rockets and missiles, writing in his 1949 book, ''Modern Arms and Free Men'', that [[intercontinental ballistic missile]]s would not be technically feasible "for a long time to come ... if ever".{{sfn|Hershberg|1993|p=393}}
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