Good morning, Whitewater.
Monday in town will be cloudy, with a high of seventy-six, and a probability of afternoon thundershowers. Sunrise is 5:19 and sunset 8:37, for 15h 17m 50s of daytime. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 91.9% of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 1943, Pres. Roosevelt writes to Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, then working with other scientists on the development of an atomic bomb. Roosevelt marks his letter ‘secret,’ and needless to say never mentions the particulars of the project or any code names used for it:
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
June 29, 1943SECRET
My dear Dr. Oppenheimer:
I have recently reviewed with Dr. Bush the highly important and secret program of research, development and manufacture with which you are familiar. I was very glad to hear of the excellent work which is being done in a number of places in this country under the immediate supervision of General L.R. Groves and the general direction of the Committee of which Dr. Bush is Chairman. The successful solution of the problem is of the utmost importance to the national safety, and I am confident that the work will be completed in as short a time as possible as the result of the wholehearted cooperation of all concerned.
I am writing to you as the leader of one group which is to play a vital role in the months ahead. I know that you and your colleagues are working on a hazardous matter under unusual circumstances. The fact that the outcome of your labors is of such great significance to the nation requires that this program be even more drastically guarded than other highly secret war development. I have therefore given directions that every precaution be taken to insure the security of your project and feel sure that those in charge will see that these orders are carried out. You are fully aware of the reasons why your endeavors and those of your associates must be circumscribed by very special restrictions. Nevertheless, I wish you would express to the scientists assembled with you my deep appreciation of their willingness to undertake the tasks which lie before them in spite of the dangers and the personal sacrifices. I am sure that we can rely on their continued wholehearted and unselfish labors. Whatever the enemy may be planning, American science will be equal to the challenge. With this thought in mind, I send this note of confidence and appreciation.
Though there are other important groups at work, I am writing only to you as the leader of one which is operating under very special conditions, and to General Groves. While this letter is secret, the contents of it may be disclosed to your associates under pledge of secrecy.
Very Sincerely Yours
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
Dr. J. R. Oppenheimer
Post Office Box 1663
Santa Fe,
New Mexico
Here’s the first game in Puzzability‘s Independence Day themed series, One Nation, Divisible:
This Week’s Game — June 29-July 3
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One Nation, Divisible
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Get out your red, white, and blue-ray for this week’s filmfest. For each day, we’ll give you a series of clues, each of which leads to a word. You must drop one letter out of each of these answer words and put them together (in order), adding spaces as needed, to get a movie title that includes a word evoking the July 4th holiday—a different such word every day.
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Example:
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“We hold ___ truths to be self-evident” / “Fourscore and seven years ___” / composer of The Merry Widow / public defamation, legally / uninhibited part of the psyche
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Answer:
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The Eagle Has Landed (these / ago / Lehar / slander / id)
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What to Submit:
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Submit the movie title and the smaller words (as “The Eagle Has Landed (these / ago / Lehar / slander / id)” in the example) for your answer.
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Monday, June 29
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