Standards, Bureau of, establishment, 85. 



State, Department of: International Sci- 

 ence Steering Committee, Science 

 and Foreign Policy, xiii-xiv; position 

 of Science Adviser to the Secretary 

 of State established, xiv. See also 

 Scientific attaches. 



State governments: achievements made by 

 research agencies of, 77; inadequacy 

 of appropriations for scientific re- 

 search, 79; expenditures for scien- 

 tific research, 85-89; need for Fed- 

 eral cooperative support of research 

 by, 101. 



States: quotas for scholarships, 155, 180- 

 185, passim; proposed roles of com- 

 mittees in, for discovery and devel- 

 opment of talent, 180-185, passim. 



Stewart, Irvin, chairman, Committee on 

 Publication of Scientific Information, 

 45, 187, 188; transmittal of report, 

 187. 



Stimson, Henry L., Secretary of War, 

 interest in postwar military research, 

 159. 



Shident and His Knov.Aedge, The, 

 Learned and Wood, data from, 170- 

 171. 



Studies, Special, Office of, NSF, xx. 



Sulfa drugs, 13, 52. 



Sulfonamides, 49, 53. 



Surgeon General's Library, 120. 



Surgeons General, advice of Division of 

 Medical Sciences, National Research 

 Council, sought by, 53. 



Surgery, 13, 49, 52, 53; Ph.D. degrees 

 in medicine and, 178. 



Synthetic fibers, 10. 



Tables: 



Proposed organization of National 

 Research Foundation, 36. 



Proposed budget. National Research 

 Foundation, 40. 



Scientific research expenditures and 

 national income, 86, 88. 



Annual expenditures for capital out- 

 lay, for scientific research institutions 

 of higher education, 87. 



Expenditures and needs of university 

 research, natural sciences and engi- 

 neering, 122. 



Analysis of research in selected uni- 

 versity departments (1939-40): de- 

 partments of physics, 127; depart- 

 ments of chemistry, 128; departments 



of biology, 129; departments of 



anatomy, physiology and bacteri- 

 ology, 130; departments of chemical 

 engineering, 131; departments of 

 electrical engineering, 1 32. 



Analysis of returns on questionnaires 

 sent to industrial laboratories and 

 nonprofit science institutes, 133. 



Proposed State quotas for scholar- 

 ships, 155. 



Deficit of scientific and technological 

 personnel resulting from war and 

 selective service policies, 158. 



1940 census figures on population 

 under 20 years of age, 166. 



1940 census figures on age and school 

 attendance of Nation's vouth, 166- 

 167. 



1940 census figures on educational 

 attainment of population 25 years old 

 and over, 167. 



Enrollments by grades in public 

 schools, 168. 



Decrease in student enrollment, per 

 1,000, fifth grade through college, 

 169. 



Relation of intelligence to educational 

 opportunity, 173. 



Relation of parental income to full- 

 time college attendance of superior 

 Milwaukee high school graduates, 

 173. 



College attendance of high school 

 graduates in Old City, 173. 



Parental income and college courses, 

 174. 



Percent of students in each economic 

 group possessing highest or lowest 

 grades of ability, 175. 



Distribution of undergraduate degrees 

 in 1941 among broad fields, 177. 



Distribution of Ph.D. degrees, 1935- 

 40, among the several sciences, 177- 

 178. 



The National Roster inventory of 

 graduate students, 1942, 178. 



Deficit in Ph.D. degrees in the phys- 

 ical sciences and engineering, 179. 



Schedule and procedures, scholarship 

 program, 184-185. 



Talent, scientific, programs for discovery 

 and development of: 

 Highlights of recoinmendations and 

 programs developed since 1950, x, 

 xv-xvii. 



Dr. Bush on — 



Proposed program, 1-2, 24-27; need 



217 



