In searching for a subject for this talk, I find that some addresses of retiring presidents have been discussions of topics relating to the social responsibilities and problems of physicists, while others have been technical reviews of research in a particular phase of physics. Professor Bridgman struck a compromise by giving a retiring address which was part political, part physical, and, being from Harvard, I have naturally decided to follow his pattern. One of the barriers about which I shall speak today is political and macroscopic, the other is physical and microscopic. As you perhaps have guessed, the political barrier phenomenon of which I will speak is that presented by the present policy of the United States regarding visas for visiting physicists from abroad. Because of limitations of time, I shall not discuss the reciprocal problem of the difficulties sometimes experienced by United States citizens in obtaining passports.
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June 1953
June 01 1953
Two barrier phenomena
Vleck's retiring presidential address at the Cambridge meeting of the American Physical Society, January 23, 1953
J. H. Van Vleck
J. H. Van Vleck
Harvard University
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Physics Today 6 (6), 5–11 (1953);
Citation
J. H. Van Vleck; Two barrier phenomena. Physics Today 1 June 1953; 6 (6): 5–11. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3061285
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