The arrest of Klaus Fuchs for espionage in 1950 was a news sensation. The renowned physicist had spent years at the very ...
In their notebooks, which police found when they broke the Soviet spy ring in Canada in 1946, Soviet espionage agents were accustomed to make a brisk notation in Russian after the names of the ...
For several years Britons have been looking down their noses at what they called “American spy hysteria.” Last week, when one of their top atomic scientists was arrested as a Russian spy, the superior ...
Atom Spy. Robert Chadwell Williams. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA. 1987. 267 pp. $25. KLAUS FUCHS The Man Who Stole the Atom Bomb. Norman Moss. St. Martin’s Press, New York, 1987. 216 pp.
When you purchase an independently reviewed book through our site, we earn an affiliate commission. By Ronald Radosh ATOMIC SPY The Dark Lives of Klaus Fuchs By Nancy Thorndike Greenspan The physicist ...
On this day, June 23, in 1959, convicted Manhattan Project spy Klaus Fuchs was released after only nine years in prison and allowed to emigrate to East Germany, where he resumed a scientific career.
Two men surreptitiously met for a half-hour 80 years ago on a downtown bridge over the Santa Fe River before driving into the hills of Santa Fe. One of the men gave the other a sealed envelope ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results