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  1. On October 3, 1945, the bill was introduced in the House of Representatives by Congressman Andrew J. May from Kentucky, the chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee, and in the Senate by Senator Edwin C. Johnson from Colorado, the ranking member of the Senate Military Affairs Committee. The bill was known as the May-Johnson Bill for its ...

    • An Act For the development and control of atomic energy
  2. The May-Johnson Bill. The Interim Committee's draft legislation reached President Truman via the State Department shortly after the armistice. After affected federal agencies approved, Truman advocated speedy passage of the congressional version of the bill, the May-Johnson bill, on October 3, 1945. Groves, Bush, and Conant testified at ...

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  4. The May-Johnson Bill hampered the scientific process and jeopardized a reasonable, global approach to nuclear policy. The scientists argued that the bill colored nuclear policy as one shaped by defense and war rather than research and shared responsibility.

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  5. Particularly onerous to the scientific opponents were the proposed penalties for security violations contained in the May-Johnson bill - ten years in prison and a $100,000 fine. Organized scientific opposition in Washington slowed the progress of the bill and ultimately doomed it.

  6. Nov 18, 2016 · It would become the Atomic Energy Act, alternately known as the McMahon Act, and was passed in July 1946. The bill proposed the creation of the Atomic Energy Commission, a civilian committee made up of five members, one of whom would be the chairman and serve as a spokesperson. The AEC would take over responsibility of United States nuclear ...

  7. Jan 18, 2024 · The bill was known as the May-Johnson Bill for its sponsors. May immediately had the bill referred to the Military Affairs Committee, which held hearings on October 9. Bush, Conant and Groves all testified before the committee. But in the Senate Military Affairs Committee, the bill was held up by Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg. [9] [10]

  8. When the May-Johnson bill was introduced on October 3, 1945, the atomic scientists were primed to respond. Across the country, scientists at different labs were in contact. Scientists in Chicago sent telegrams to scientists in Los Alamos; researchers at Oak Ridge called researchers in New York. All were debating the new bill and the future of ...

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