1. Dr. Oppenheimer.
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2. Dr. Oppenheimer.
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3. As we begin, I believe you have a
statement to read into the record.
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4. Yes, Your Honor.
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5. We’re not judges, Doctor.
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6. No.
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7. Of course.
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8. Members of the security board.
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9. The so-called and derogatory
information in your indictment of me
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10. cannot be fairly understood,
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11. except in the context
of my life and my work.
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12. How long did he testify?
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13. Honestly, I forget.
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14. The whole hearing took a month.
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15. An ordeal.
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16. I’ve only read the transcripts,
but...
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17. Who’d want to justify
their whole life?
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18. - You weren’t there?
- As chairman, I wasn’t allowed to be.
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19. Are they really going
to ask about it?
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20. It was years ago.
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21. - Four years ago.
- Five.
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22. Oppenheimer
still divides America.
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23. The committee is gonna want
to know where you stood.
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24. Senator Thurmond asked me to
say not to feel that you’re on trial.
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25. Aw. Funny, I didn’t
till you just said that.
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26. Really, Mr. Strauss--
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27. It’s Admiral.
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28. Admiral Strauss.
This is a formality.
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29. President Eisenhower has
asked you to be in his cabinet.
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30. Senate really has no choice
but to confirm you.
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31. And if they bring up
Oppenheimer?
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32. When they bring up Oppenheimer,
you answer honestly.
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33. No senator can deny
you did your duty.
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34. It’ll be uncomfortable.
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35. Who’d want to justify
their whole life?
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36. Why did you leave
the United States?
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37. I, uh-- I wanted to study
the new physics.
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38. Was there nowhere here?
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39. I thought Berkeley had the leading
theoretical physics department.
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40. Yes. Once I had built it.
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41. But first I had to go to Europe.
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42. I went to Cambridge
to study under Patrick Blackett.
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43. Were you happier there
than in America?
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44. - Happier?
- Yes.
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45. No.
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46. No, I, uh...
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47. I was homesick, um,
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48. emotionally immature,
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49. troubled by visions
of a hidden universe.
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50. Useless in the lab.
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51. Christ, Oppenheimer.
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52. Have you had any sleep?
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53. Start again.
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54. I need to go
to the lecture, sir.
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55. Why?
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56. It’s Niels Bohr.
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57. I’d completely forgot.
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58. All right.
Let’s go.
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59. Oh, no, not you, Oppenheimer.
You finish coating those plates.
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60. Quantum physics
is not a step forward.
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61. It is a new way
to understand reality.
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62. Einstein’s opened the door.
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63. Now we are peering through,
seeing a world inside our world.
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64. A world of energy and paradox
that not everyone can accept.
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65. Yeah-- Are you all right?
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66. Niels,
meet J. Robert Oppenheimer.
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67. What’s the J stand for?
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68. Nothing, apparently.
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69. You were at my lecture. You
asked the only good question.
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70. No one’s denying his insight.
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71. It’s his laboratory work that
leaves a little to be desired.
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72. I heard you give
the same lectu--
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73. At Harvard, yes,
and you asked the same question.
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74. Why ask again?
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75. Hadn’t liked your answer.
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76. - Did you like it better yesterday?
- A lot.
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77. You can lift the stone without being
ready for the snake that’s revealed.
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78. Now it seems you’re ready.
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79. But you don’t enjoy the lab?
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80. So get out of Cambridge
with its beakers and potions.
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81. Go somewhere
they’ll let you think.
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82. Where?
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83. Göttingen.
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84. - Born.
- Born.
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85. Get to Germany.
Study under Max Born.
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86. Learn the ways of theory.
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87. I’ll send word.
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88. Wormhole.
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89. How’s your mathematics?
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90. Not good enough for the
physicist he wants to be.
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91. Algebra’s like sheet music.
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92. The important thing isn’t
"can you read music?"
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93. It’s "can you hear it?"
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94. Can you hear the music, Robert?
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95. Yes, I can.
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96. The senator from Wyoming.
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97. Admiral Strauss,
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98. I’m interested in
your relationship with
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99. Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer.
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100. You met him in 1947?
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101. Correct.
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102. You were commissioner of
the Atomic Energy Commission?
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103. I was, but I actually met Robert
in my capacity as board member
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104. of the Institute for
Advanced Study at Princeton,
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105. because after the war
he was world renowned
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106. as the great man of physics,
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107. and I was determined
to get him to run the Institute.
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108. Dr. Oppenheimer. An honor.
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109. Mr. Strauss.
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110. It’s pronounced "straws."
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111. Oh-ppenheimer, Oppenheimer.
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112. Whatever way you say it,
they know I’m Jewish.
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113. I’m president of Temple
Emanu-El in Manhattan.
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114. "Straws" is just
the Southern pronunciation.
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115. Anyway,
welcome to the Institute.
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116. I think you could be
very happy here.
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117. Yes, well,
you’ll love the commute.
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118. The position comes with that
house for you and your wife,
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119. and your-- Is it two children?
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120. Yes, two.
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121. I’m a great admirer
of your work.
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122. And you’re a physicist
by training, Mr. Strauss?
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123. I’m sorry, common room,
four o’clock tea.
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124. No, I’m not trained
in physics or anything else.
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125. I’m a self-made man.
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126. Ah. I can relate to that.
Really?
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127. Yes, my father was one.
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128. And this would be your office.
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129. I’m told he’s there
most afternoons.
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130. You know, I’ve always wondered
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131. why you didn’t involve him
in the Manhattan Project.
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132. Greatest scientific mind
of our time.
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133. Of his time.
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134. Einstein published
his Theory of Relativity
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135. more than 40 years ago now.
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136. But never embraced
the quantum world it revealed.
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137. "God doesn’t play dice."
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138. Precisely.
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139. You never thought of studying
physics formally, Mr. Strauss?
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140. I had offers,
but I chose to sell shoes.
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141. Lewis Strauss was once
a lowly shoe salesman.
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142. No, just a shoe salesman.
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143. I’d love to introduce you.
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144. No need.
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145. I have known him for years.
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146. Albert.
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147. What was that?
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148. What did you say to him?
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149. Oh, he’s fine.
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150. Mr. Strauss, there are things in
my past you ought to be aware of.
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151. Well, as chairman of the AEC, I
have access to your security file.
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152. I’ve read it.
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153. You’re not worried?
No.
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154. Why would I be worried after
everything you’ve done for your country?
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155. Well, times change,
Mr. Strauss.
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156. Well, the purpose
of this institute
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157. is to provide a haven
for independent minds.
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158. That’s you.
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159. You are the man for the job.
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160. Well, then I’ll consider it.
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161. I’ll see you
at the AEC meeting tomorrow.
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162. This is one of the most prestigious
appointments in the country.
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163. Yes, with a great commute.
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164. That’s why I’m considering it.
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165. So, Dr. Oppenheimer brought
your attention to
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166. his past associations
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167. before you appointed him?
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168. - Yes.
- And they didn’t concern you?
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169. Just then I was
entirely consumed
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170. with what he must have said
to Einstein
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171. to sour him on me.
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172. But later?
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173. Well, we all know
what happened later.
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174. Doctor, your time in Europe,
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175. you seemed to meet
with a wide range
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176. of other countries’ physicists.
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177. Yes, that’s right.
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178. Any Russians?
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179. None that spring to mind.
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180. If you’ll just allow me
to continue with my statement--
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181. Mr. Robb, you’ll have ample
opportunity to cross-examine.
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182. After Göttingen,
I moved on to Leiden in Holland,
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183. where I first met Isidor Rabi.
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184. Excuse me.
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185. A Yank, lecturing
on the new physics?
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186. This I have to hear.
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187. I’m an American myself.
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188. How surprising.
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189. Let me know if you need any help
with the English.
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190. Wait, what’s he saying?
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191. No, thank you.
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192. It’s a long way to Zurich.
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193. You get any skinnier, we’re gonna
lose you between the seat cushions.
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194. I’m Rabi.
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195. Oppenheimer.
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196. I caught your lecture
on molecules.
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197. Caught some of it.
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198. We’re a couple of New York Jews.
How do you know Dutch?
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199. Well, I thought I’d better learn
it when I got here this semester.
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200. You learned enough Dutch in six weeks
to give a lecture on quantum mechanics?
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201. Wanted to challenge myself.
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202. Quantum physics wasn’t
challenging enough.
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203. Schvitzer.
Schvitzer?
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204. Show-off.
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205. Dutch in six weeks,
but you never learned Yiddish?
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206. They don’t speak it so much
my side of the park.
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207. Screw you.
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208. - You homesick?
- Oh, you know it.
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209. Ever get the feeling our kind
isn’t entirely welcome here?
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210. Physicists?
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211. That’s funny.
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212. Not in the department.
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213. They’re all Jewish too.
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214. Eat.
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215. There’s a German
you have to seek out.
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216. Heisenberg.
Right.
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217. One might be led to the presumption
that behind the quantum world,
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218. there still hides a real world
in which causality holds,
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219. but such speculations seem
to us, to say it explicitly, fruitless.
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220. Thank you. Have a great day.
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221. Werner. Wonderful.
Thank you.
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222. Dr. Oppenheimer.
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223. Oppenheimer, yes. I liked
your paper on molecules.
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224. Probably because
you inspired it.
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225. If I inspire anything else,
let me know.
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226. We could publish together.
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227. I have to get back to America.
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228. Why?
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229. There’s no one there
taking quantum mechanics seriously.
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230. That’s exactly why.
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231. He’s pining for
the canyons of Manhattan.
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232. Canyons of New Mexico.
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233. You’re from New Mexico?
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234. No. New York,
but my brother and I
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235. have a ranch outside Santa Fe.
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236. That’s the America
I miss right now.
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237. Then it’s best
you get home, cowboys.
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238. That’s him.
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239. No, me and horses?
I don’t think so.
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240. Nice to meet you.
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241. Did you ever encounter
Heisenberg again?
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242. Not in person, no, but, uh...
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243. you might say our paths crossed.
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244. On returning to America,
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245. I accepted positions at
both Caltech and up at Berkeley.
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246. Dr. Lawrence, I presume?
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247. - You must be Oppenheimer.
- Yes.
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248. I hear you want to start
a school of quantum theory.
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249. I am starting it. Next door.
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250. They put you in there?
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251. I asked for it.
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252. Wanted to be close
to you experimentalists.
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253. Theory will get you
only so far, huh?
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254. We’re building a machine
to accelerate electrons.
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255. Magnificent.
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256. Would you like to help?
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257. Build it? Oh, no.
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258. No, no.
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259. But I am working on theories
I’d like to test with it.
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260. When do you start teaching?
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261. I’ve got my first in an hour.
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262. - Seminar?
- Pupil.
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263. One student? That’s it?
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264. I’m teaching something
no one here has dreamt of.
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265. But once people start hearing
what you can do with it--
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266. There’s no going back.
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267. - Oh. I must have missed the--
- Mr. Lomanitz?
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268. Nah--
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269. Yeah.
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270. Yes, this is it.
Please. Take a seat.
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271. What do you know
about quantum mechanics?
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272. I have a grasp on the basics.
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273. Then you’re doing it wrong.
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274. Is light made up
of particles or waves?
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275. Quantum mechanics says
it’s both. How could it be both?
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276. - It can’t.
- It can’t.
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277. But it is.
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278. It’s paradoxical,
and yet, it works.
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279. Now...
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280. Thank you.
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281. Mr. Lomanitz.
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282. You’re gonna be okay.
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283. Mr. Snyder.
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284. Now let’s consider a star.
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285. A star.
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286. A vast furnace
burning in outer space,
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287. fire pushing outwards
against its own gravity.
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288. Balanced.
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289. But if that furnace cools
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290. and gravity starts winning,
it contracts.
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291. Density increases.
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292. Correct.
Increasing gravity.
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293. - Increasing density.
- And?
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294. It’s a vicious cycle until...
What’s the limit here?
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295. I don’t know.
See where the math takes us.
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296. I guarantee it’s somewhere
no one’s been before.
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297. Me?
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298. Yes, you.
Your math is better than mine.
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299. Dr. Oppenheimer’s file
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300. contained details
of his activities in Berkeley.
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301. Why would they have started
a file on Dr. Oppenheimer
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302. before the war?
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303. Well, you’d have to ask
Mr. Hoover.
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304. I’m asking you, Admiral Strauss.
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305. Uh, my assumption is
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306. that it was connected to his,
uh, left-wing political activities.
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307. You shouldn’t let them bring up
politics in the classroom, Oppie.
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308. I wrote that.
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309. Lawrence, you embrace
the revolution in physics.
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310. Can’t you see it
everywhere else?
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311. Picasso, Stravinsky,
Freud, Marx.
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312. Well, this is America, Oppie.
We had our revolution.
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313. Seriously,
keep it out of the lab.
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314. Well, out of the lab, my landlady is
having a discussion group tonight.
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315. Interested?
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316. I have sampled
the Berkeley political scene.
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317. It’s all just philosophy postgrads
and communists talking integration.
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318. You don’t care
about integration?
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319. I want to vote for it,
not talk about it.
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320. Especially on a Friday.
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321. Come on. Let’s eat.
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322. I’m meeting my brother there.
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323. And how would these activities
have come to the attention of the FBI?
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324. Well, if I remember correctly,
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325. the FBI was taking license plates
outside suspected communist gatherings,
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326. and his name popped up.
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327. Jesus Christ. Sorry.
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328. Frank.
Robert.
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329. Uh, you remember Jackie.
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330. Evening.
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331. Let’s go.
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332. Robert.
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333. I want you to meet Chevalier.
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334. Dr. Haakon Chevalier,
Dr. Robert Oppenheimer.
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335. Pleasure.
Pleasure.
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336. This is
my little brother, Frank. Hello.
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337. - And this is--
- Still Jackie.
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338. Hello, Still Jackie.
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339. Chevalier, you’re in languages?
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340. And your reputation
precedes you.
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341. What have you heard?
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342. That you’re teaching a radical
new approach to physics
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343. I have no chance
of understanding,
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344. but I hadn’t heard
you’re a Party member.
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345. - I’m not.
- Not yet.
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346. Frank and I are thinking of
joining. Just the other day, I was--
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347. I support a range of causes.
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348. The Spanish Civil War?
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349. A democratic republic being
overthrown by fascist thugs, who wouldn’t?
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350. Our government. They think that
socialism is a bigger threat than fascism.
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351. Not for long. Look at what
the Nazis are doing to the Jews.
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352. I send funds to colleagues
in Germany to emigrate.
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353. I have to do something.
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354. My own work is so abstract.
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355. What are you working on? What
happens to stars when they die.
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356. Do stars die?
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357. Well, if they do,
they cool, then collapse.
Copy !req
358. In fact, the bigger the star,
the more violent its demise.
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359. Their gravity gets so
concentrated, it swallows everything.
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360. Everything, even light.
Copy !req
361. Can that really happen?
Copy !req
362. The math says it can.
Copy !req
363. If we can get published, then perhaps
one day an astronomer finds one.
Copy !req
364. But right now,
all I have is theory,
Copy !req
365. which can’t impact
people’s lives.
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366. Well, if you’re going
to send money to Spain,
Copy !req
367. do it through
the Communist Party.
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368. - They can get it to the front lines.
- Mary sent me with these.
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369. I’m Jean.
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370. Robert.
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371. Haakon Chevalier.
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372. The union meeting
at Serber’s last month.
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373. Right, right, yes.
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374. Oh, thank you.
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375. Robert here
says he’s not a communist.
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376. Well, then he doesn’t
know enough about it.
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377. I’ve read Das Kapital,
all three volumes.
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378. - Does that count?
- It would make you better read than most party members.
Copy !req
379. It’s turgid stuff. There’s some
thinking, "Ownership is theft."
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380. "Property."
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381. "Property"?
"Property," not "ownership."
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382. I’m sorry, I read it
in the original German.
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383. Well...
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384. It’s not about the book.
It’s about the ideas.
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385. And you sound uncommitted.
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386. I’m committed to thinking freely
about how to improve our world.
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387. Why limit yourself to one dogma?
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388. You’re a physicist.
You pick and choose rules?
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389. Or do you use the discipline to
channel your energies into progress?
Copy !req
390. I like a little wiggle room.
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391. Do you always
toe the party line?
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392. I like my wiggle room too.
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393. What?
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394. Wait, wait, wait.
Copy !req
395. - Unexpected.
- What?
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396. For a physicist.
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397. You only have a shelf
full of Freud?
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398. Well, actually,
my background’s more--
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399. Jungian?
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400. You know analysis?
Copy !req
401. When I was a postgrad at
Cambridge, I had a little trouble.
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402. I’ll bite.
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403. I tried to poison my tutor.
Copy !req
404. Did you hate him?
Copy !req
405. I liked him very much.
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406. You just needed to get laid.
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407. Took my analyst two years,
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408. and I don’t think they ever
put it that succinctly.
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409. You have everyone convinced you’re
more complicated than you actually are.
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410. We’re all simple souls, I guess.
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411. I’m not.
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412. What’s this?
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413. Sanskrit.
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414. You can read this?
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415. I’m learning.
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416. Read this.
Copy !req
417. Well, in this part, Vishnu
reveals his multi-armed self--
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418. No.
Copy !req
419. Read the words.
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420. "And now I am become Death."
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421. "The destroyer of worlds."
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422. This’ll do.
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423. It’ll break before dawn.
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424. Air cools overnight.
Just before dawn, it breaks.
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425. Come on. Come on.
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426. So...
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427. I’m getting married.
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428. - Frank. Congratulations.
- Thank you.
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429. To Jackie?
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430. Yeah, to Jackie.
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431. The waitress.
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432. Oppie, you’re right.
It’s lettin’ up.
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433. I’m gonna go see
if there’s any stars.
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434. All your talk
about the common man,
Copy !req
435. but Jackie’s not good enough
for you, hmm?
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436. We join the Party, and you
can’t hide your disapproval, why?
Copy !req
437. Is that because that’s
supposed to be your thing?
Copy !req
438. I haven’t joined the Party, Frank.
Copy !req
439. And I don’t think she should
have convinced you to either.
Copy !req
440. Half of the faculty
is communist.
Copy !req
441. Not that half.
Copy !req
442. I’m your brother, Frank,
and I want you to be cautious.
Copy !req
443. And I want to wring your neck.
Copy !req
444. I won’t live my life
afraid to make a mistake.
Copy !req
445. You’re happy, I’m happy.
Copy !req
446. So then I’m happy you’re happy
that I’m happy.
Copy !req
447. I feel like I could see one of those
dark stars that you’re working on.
Copy !req
448. You can’t.
That’s the whole point.
Copy !req
449. Their gravity swallows light.
Copy !req
450. It’s like a kind of hole
in space.
Copy !req
451. Is Frank okay?
Copy !req
452. Yes. He just has
a shitty brother.
Copy !req
453. It is special here.
Copy !req
454. When I was a kid,
Copy !req
455. I thought if I could find a way
Copy !req
456. to combine physics
and New Mexico,
Copy !req
457. my life would be perfect.
Copy !req
458. Little remote for that. Yes.
Copy !req
459. Let’s get some sleep.
Copy !req
460. That mesa we saw today, one
of my favorite places in the world.
Copy !req
461. Tomorrow we’ll climb it.
Copy !req
462. What’s it called?
Copy !req
463. Los Alamos.
Copy !req
464. I didn’t expect
to see you today.
Copy !req
465. Do I have to
make an appointment?
Copy !req
466. - Hey! Hey, get back here!
- Alvarez?
Copy !req
467. Oppie! Oppie!
Copy !req
468. What? What is it?
Copy !req
469. They’ve done it.
They’ve done it.
Copy !req
470. Hahn and Strassmann in Germany.
They split the uranium nucleus.
Copy !req
471. How?
Copy !req
472. Bombarded it with neutrons.
Copy !req
473. It’s a nuclear fission. They
did it, they split the atom.
Copy !req
474. It’s not possible.
Copy !req
475. I’m gonna try to reproduce it.
Copy !req
476. See? Can’t be done.
Copy !req
477. Very elegant.
Copy !req
478. Quite clear.
Copy !req
479. There’s just one problem.
Where?
Copy !req
480. Next door.
Copy !req
481. Alvarez did it.
Copy !req
482. But then look,
Copy !req
483. these fission pulses,
they’re massive.
Copy !req
484. I’ve seen 30 of these
in the past ten minutes.
Copy !req
485. Theory will take you
only so far.
Copy !req
486. During the process,
Copy !req
487. extra neutrons boil off, which could
be used to split other uranium atoms.
Copy !req
488. Chain reaction. You’re
thinkin’ what I’m thinkin’?
Copy !req
489. You, me and every other
physicist around the world
Copy !req
490. who’s seen the news.
Copy !req
491. What?
What are we all thinking?
Copy !req
492. A bomb, Alvarez.
Copy !req
493. A bomb.
Copy !req
494. I told you, Robert,
no more fucking flowers.
Copy !req
495. I don’t understand what you want
from me. I don’t want anything from you.
Copy !req
496. Well, you say that and then
you call. Well, don’t answer.
Copy !req
497. I’ll always answer.
Copy !req
498. Fine. Just no more flowers.
Copy !req
499. You’re not coming?
Copy !req
500. You have to know
when you’re beaten, Robert.
Copy !req
501. It’s not that simple, Hoke.
Copy !req
502. - Chevalier, good to see you.
- F-A-E-C-T! F-A-E-C-T!
Copy !req
503. Barbara, good to see you, and
the illustrious Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
504. I’m Eltenton. Pleasure.
Copy !req
505. Please, please.
Copy !req
506. Might you say a word about
organized labor on campuses, yes?
Copy !req
507. Coming through!
Coming through.
Copy !req
508. I work at Shell.
Copy !req
509. We’ve signed up chemists,
we signed up engineers,
Copy !req
510. so why not scientists
in academia?
Copy !req
511. Oppie! Oppie! Oppie!
Oppie! Oppie! Oppie!
Copy !req
512. Teachers are unionized.
Copy !req
513. - Why not professors?
- Don’t you have somewhere to be?
Copy !req
514. Lawrence,
academics have rights too.
Copy !req
515. Look, it’s not that.
I’ve got a group coming.
Copy !req
516. Oh. I’ll sit in.
Copy !req
517. Not this one.
Copy !req
518. Richard. Dr. Bush.
What brings you two up north?
Copy !req
519. Richard, you tell Ruth I’ll be
down to Pasadena Thursday.
Copy !req
520. Your paper on black holes is in!
Copy !req
521. Where’s Hartland?
Copy !req
522. Get Hartland. Get Hartland.
Copy !req
523. September 1st, 1939. The
world’s gonna remember this day.
Copy !req
524. Oh, Hartland.
Our paper, it’s in print.
Copy !req
525. We’ve been upstaged.
Copy !req
526. During the Battle of Britain,
Copy !req
527. I found myself
increasingly out of sympathy
Copy !req
528. with the policy of neutrality
that communists advocated.
Copy !req
529. But after Hitler invaded Russia
and we became allies,
Copy !req
530. these communist sympathies,
did they return?
Copy !req
531. No.
Copy !req
532. I need to make clear
that my changing views on Russia
Copy !req
533. did not mean a sharp break from
those who held different views.
Copy !req
534. For a year or two,
and during a previous marriage,
Copy !req
535. my wife Kitty had been
a Communist Party member.
Copy !req
536. This way. This is where
I keep the good stuff.
Copy !req
537. I thought this was
the Tolmans’ house.
Copy !req
538. I live with them
while I’m at Caltech.
Copy !req
539. - Do you two need anything?
- We’re good, Ruthie.
Copy !req
540. So, you’re a biologist.
Copy !req
541. Well, somehow I have
graduated to housewife.
Copy !req
542. Can you explain quantum
mechanics to me? Seems baffling.
Copy !req
543. Yes, it is.
Copy !req
544. Well, this glass, this drink,
Copy !req
545. this countertop, uh, our bodies,
Copy !req
546. all of it.
Copy !req
547. It’s mostly empty space.
Copy !req
548. Groupings of tiny energy waves
bound together.
Copy !req
549. By what?
Copy !req
550. Forces of attraction
strong enough to convince us
Copy !req
551. that matter is solid, stop my
body passing through yours.
Copy !req
552. You’re married to Dr. Harrison.
Copy !req
553. Not very.
Copy !req
554. There is someone that I feel--
Copy !req
555. Does she feel the same way?
Copy !req
556. Sometimes.
Copy !req
557. Not enough.
Copy !req
558. You know,
I’m going to New Mexico.
Copy !req
559. To my ranch, with friends.
You should come.
Copy !req
560. I meant with your husband.
Copy !req
561. Yes, you did.
Copy !req
562. ’Cause you know it won’t make
Copy !req
563. a bit of difference.
Copy !req
564. Why did you marry him?
Copy !req
565. I was lost and he was kind.
Copy !req
566. Lost?
Copy !req
567. Well, my previous husband
had died,
Copy !req
568. and at 28 I wasn’t really ready
to be a widow.
Copy !req
569. Who was your first husband?
Copy !req
570. Nobody. But my second
husband was Joe Dallet.
Copy !req
571. He was, um, from money, like me,
Copy !req
572. but he was a union organizer
in Youngstown, Ohio.
Copy !req
573. Fell hard.
Copy !req
574. How hard?
Copy !req
575. Hard enough to spend
the next four years
Copy !req
576. living off beans and pancakes,
Copy !req
577. handing out the Daily Worker
at factory gates.
Copy !req
578. By 36, I just told Joe
I couldn’t take it anymore.
Copy !req
579. Quit the Party. A year
later, I wanted him back.
Copy !req
580. Him, not the Daily Worker.
Copy !req
581. He said, "Swell, I’ll meet
you on my way to Spain."
Copy !req
582. He went to fight
for the Loyalists?
Copy !req
583. And then he went to the
brigades and I waited, and...
Copy !req
584. Joe got himself killed first time he
popped his head outta the trench.
Copy !req
585. Ideology got Joe killed.
For nothing.
Copy !req
586. Spanish Republic isn’t nothing.
Copy !req
587. My husband offered both our
futures to stop one fascist bullet
Copy !req
588. from embedding itself
in a mudbank.
Copy !req
589. That’s the definition
of nothing.
Copy !req
590. Seems a little reductive. Pragmatic.
Copy !req
591. Now here I am.
Copy !req
592. Wherever the hell this is.
Copy !req
593. I didn’t want you to hear it
from anyone else.
Copy !req
594. Least you didn’t
bring me flowers.
Copy !req
595. We both know
I’m not what you want, Jean.
Copy !req
596. Yeah, but it’s a door closing.
Copy !req
597. No.
Copy !req
598. Not as far as I’m concerned, no.
Copy !req
599. You knocked her up.
Fast work.
Copy !req
600. Can’t keep a good man down.
Copy !req
601. I meant her.
Copy !req
602. She knew what she wanted.
What about the husband?
Copy !req
603. We talked.
Copy !req
604. They’re getting a divorce
Copy !req
605. so we can get married
before she starts showing.
Copy !req
606. How civilized.
Copy !req
607. You idiot.
This is your community.
Copy !req
608. You think the rules don’t apply
to the golden boy?
Copy !req
609. Brilliance makes up for a lot.
Copy !req
610. Don’t alienate the only people in
the world that understand what you do.
Copy !req
611. One day you might need them.
Copy !req
612. F-A-E-C-T! F-A-E-C-T!
Copy !req
613. The Federation of Architects, Engineers,
Copy !req
614. Chemists and Technicians.
Copy !req
615. - Lomanitz, what do you get paid a month?
- That’s not the point, Lawrence.
Copy !req
616. What do any of you have in common
with farm laborers and dock workers?
Copy !req
617. Plenty.
Copy !req
618. Everybody out. Now!
Copy !req
619. Not you.
Copy !req
620. What are you doing?
Copy !req
621. It’s a trade union.
Filled with communists.
Copy !req
622. So? I haven’t
joined the Party.
Copy !req
623. They won’t let me bring you onto
the project because of this shit.
Copy !req
624. They won’t even let me tell you
what the project is.
Copy !req
625. Oh, I know what the
project is. Oh, really?
Copy !req
626. We’ve all heard about Einstein
and Szilard’s letter to Roosevelt
Copy !req
627. warning him the Germans
could make a bomb,
Copy !req
628. and I know what it means
for the Nazis to have a bomb.
Copy !req
629. And I don’t?
Copy !req
630. It’s not your people
they’re herding into camps.
Copy !req
631. It’s mine.
Copy !req
632. You think that I tell them
about your politics.
Copy !req
633. The next time you’re
coming home from a meeting,
Copy !req
634. why don’t you take a look
in the rearview mirror?
Copy !req
635. Listen to the sounds on your phone
line and stop being so goddamn naive.
Copy !req
636. Why would they care what I do?
Copy !req
637. Because you’re not
just self-important,
Copy !req
638. you’re actually important.
Copy !req
639. Okay.
Copy !req
640. I get it. If you could
just be a little more--
Copy !req
641. Pragmatic.
Copy !req
642. I’ll talk to Lomanitz,
I’ll talk to the others.
Copy !req
643. You don’t have to worry.
It’s done, Lawrence.
Copy !req
644. Then welcome to the war.
Copy !req
645. I filled out
my first security questionnaire
Copy !req
646. and was informed that my
involvement with left-wing groups
Copy !req
647. would not prove a bar to my
working on the atomic program.
Copy !req
648. Why were
his communist associations
Copy !req
649. not seen as a security risk
during the war?
Copy !req
650. Senator, I can’t possibly
answer for security clearance
Copy !req
651. granted years
before I ever met the man.
Copy !req
652. Fine. What about after?
Copy !req
653. After the war,
Copy !req
654. Dr. Oppenheimer was the most
respected scientific voice in the world.
Copy !req
655. That’s why I asked him
to run the Institute.
Copy !req
656. That’s why he advised
the Atomic Energy Commission.
Copy !req
657. Simple as that.
Copy !req
658. What are they accusing me of?
Copy !req
659. I think they just wanna know what
happened between 1947 and 1954
Copy !req
660. to change your mind on
Oppenheimer’s security clearance.
Copy !req
661. I didn’t.
Copy !req
662. I was chair of the AEC,
Copy !req
663. but it wasn’t me that brought
the charges against Robert.
Copy !req
664. Who did?
Copy !req
665. Some former staff member of the
Joint Congressional Committee.
Copy !req
666. He was a rabid anti-communist
named Borden.
Copy !req
667. He wrote to the FBI
demanding they take action.
Copy !req
668. The FBI? Why not go
to the AEC direct?
Copy !req
669. Why get caught
holding the knife yourself?
Copy !req
670. What did Borden have
against Oppenheimer?
Copy !req
671. This was the McCarthy Era.
Copy !req
672. People hounded out of jobs
for any hint of red.
Copy !req
673. And then, reading
Oppenheimer’s security file,
Copy !req
674. his communist brother,
sister-in-law, fiancée,
Copy !req
675. best friend, wife.
Copy !req
676. That’s before we even get
to the Chevalier incident.
Copy !req
677. But how would Borden have access
to Oppenheimer’s security file?
Copy !req
678. Because somebody gave it to him.
Copy !req
679. Somebody
who wanted Robert silenced.
Copy !req
680. Who?
Who knows?
Copy !req
681. Robert didn’t take care not to upset
the power brokers in Washington.
Copy !req
682. His opinions on the atom
became definitive
Copy !req
683. and he wasn’t always patient
with us mere mortals.
Copy !req
684. I came in for plenty
of harsh treatment.
Copy !req
685. There was an AEC vote
Copy !req
686. on the export of isotopes
to Norway,
Copy !req
687. and they drafted in Robert
to make me look like a fool.
Copy !req
688. But, Dr. Oppenheimer,
Copy !req
689. we’ve already heard
from Admiral Strauss
Copy !req
690. that these isotopes
could be useful to our enemies
Copy !req
691. in the production
of atomic weapons.
Copy !req
692. Congressmen, you could use a
shovel in making atomic weapons.
Copy !req
693. In fact, you do.
Copy !req
694. You could use a bottle of beer
in making atomic weapons.
Copy !req
695. In fact, you do.
Copy !req
696. I say isotopes are less useful
than electronic components,
Copy !req
697. but more useful than a sandwich.
Copy !req
698. Genius is no guarantee
of wisdom.
Copy !req
699. How could this man
who saw so much be so blind?
Copy !req
700. Kitty?
Copy !req
701. Kitty?
Copy !req
702. Kitty, the project--
Copy !req
703. I’m in. I’m in.
Copy !req
704. Let’s celebrate.
Copy !req
705. Shouldn’t you go to him?
Copy !req
706. I have been going to him
all fucking day.
Copy !req
707. Okay.
Copy !req
708. Here.
Copy !req
709. Come here, darling.
Copy !req
710. I don’t know how to say this.
Copy !req
711. I-I’m ashamed to ask.
Copy !req
712. Anything.
Copy !req
713. - Take Peter.
- Sure.
Copy !req
714. No, for a while, Hoke.
Copy !req
715. A while.
Copy !req
716. Does Kitty know you’re here?
Copy !req
717. Yes, of course she knows.
Copy !req
718. Of course she knows.
Copy !req
719. We’re awful people.
Selfish, awful people.
Copy !req
720. Forget I asked.
Copy !req
721. Selfish, awful people,
Copy !req
722. they don’t know
they’re selfish and awful.
Copy !req
723. Sit, sit, sit.
Copy !req
724. Robert, you see
beyond the world we live in.
Copy !req
725. There is a price to be paid
for that.
Copy !req
726. Of course we’ll help you.
Copy !req
727. Everything’s changing, Robert.
Copy !req
728. Having a child
was always going to change--
Copy !req
729. No, the world, it’s pivoting
in some new direction.
Copy !req
730. It’s reforming.
Copy !req
731. This is your moment.
Copy !req
732. We’re putting together a group
to study feasibili--
Copy !req
733. "We" shouldn’t be doing
anything. You should.
Copy !req
734. Lawrence won’t get this done.
Copy !req
735. Or Tolman, or Rabi.
You will.
Copy !req
736. Who are the uniforms?
Copy !req
737. I thought you might know.
Copy !req
738. Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
739. I’m Colonel Groves.
Copy !req
740. This is
Lieutenant Colonel Nichols.
Copy !req
741. Have that dry cleaned.
Copy !req
742. Well, if that’s how you
treat Lieutenant Colonel,
Copy !req
743. I’d hate to see how you treat
a humble physicist.
Copy !req
744. If I ever meet one,
I’ll let you know.
Copy !req
745. Ouch.
Copy !req
746. Theaters of combat
all over the world,
Copy !req
747. but I have to stay
in Washington.
Copy !req
748. - Why?
- I built the Pentagon.
Copy !req
749. The brass likes it so much they made me
take over the Manhattan Engineer District.
Copy !req
750. Which is?
Copy !req
751. Don’t be a smart ass.
Copy !req
752. You know damn well what it is.
Copy !req
753. You and half of every physics
department across the country.
Copy !req
754. That’s problem number one.
Copy !req
755. I thought problem number one
would be securing enough uranium ore.
Copy !req
756. - 1,200 tons bought the day I took charge.
- Processing?
Copy !req
757. Just broke ground
at Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
Copy !req
758. Now I’m looking for
a project director.
Copy !req
759. And my name came up?
Copy !req
760. Nope.
Copy !req
761. Even though you brought
quantum physics to America.
Copy !req
762. - Which made me curious.
- What’ve you found out?
Copy !req
763. You’re a dilettante,
a womanizer,
Copy !req
764. a suspected communist--
Copy !req
765. I’m a New Deal Democrat.
Copy !req
766. I said "suspected."
Copy !req
767. Unstable, theatrical,
egotistical, neurotic--
Copy !req
768. Nothing good, no? Not even,
"He’s brilliant, but--"
Copy !req
769. Well, brilliance is taken for
granted in your circle, so no.
Copy !req
770. No, the only person who had anything
good to say was Richard Tolman.
Copy !req
771. Tolman thinks
you have integrity,
Copy !req
772. but he also strikes me as a guy who
knows more about science than people.
Copy !req
773. Yet here you are.
Copy !req
774. You don’t take much on trust.
Copy !req
775. I don’t take anything on trust.
Copy !req
776. Why don’t you have
a Nobel prize?
Copy !req
777. - Why aren’t you a general?
- They’re making me one for this.
Copy !req
778. Perhaps I’ll have the same luck.
Copy !req
779. A Nobel prize for making a bomb?
Copy !req
780. Alfred Nobel invented dynamite.
Copy !req
781. So how would you proceed?
Copy !req
782. You’re talking about turning theory
into a practical weapons system
Copy !req
783. faster than the Nazis.
Copy !req
784. Who have a 12-month head start.
Copy !req
785. - Eighteen.
- How could you possibly know that?
Copy !req
786. Our fast neutron research
took six months.
Copy !req
787. The man they’ve undoubtedly
put in charge
Copy !req
788. will have made that leap instantly.
Copy !req
789. - Who do you think they put in charge?
- Werner Heisenberg.
Copy !req
790. He has the most intuitive
understanding of atomic structure
Copy !req
791. I have ever seen.
Copy !req
792. - You know his work?
- I know him.
Copy !req
793. Just like I know Walther Bothe,
Von Weizsäcker, Diebner.
Copy !req
794. In a straight race,
the Germans win.
Copy !req
795. We’ve got one hope.
Copy !req
796. Which is?
Copy !req
797. Anti-Semitism.
Copy !req
798. What?
Copy !req
799. Hitler called quantum physics
Copy !req
800. "Jewish science."
Copy !req
801. Said it right
to Einstein’s face.
Copy !req
802. Our one hope is that Hitler
is so, so blinded by hate
Copy !req
803. that he’s denied Heisenberg
proper resources,
Copy !req
804. because it’ll take
vast resources.
Copy !req
805. Our nation’s best scientists,
working together.
Copy !req
806. Right now, they’re scattered.
Copy !req
807. Which gives us compartmentalization.
Copy !req
808. All minds have to see the
whole task to contribute efficiently.
Copy !req
809. Poor security
may cost us the race.
Copy !req
810. Inefficiency will.
Copy !req
811. The Germans know
more than us anyway.
Copy !req
812. The Russians don’t.
Copy !req
813. Remind me,
who are we at war with?
Copy !req
814. Somebody with your past
doesn’t wanna be seen downplaying
Copy !req
815. the importance of security
from our communist allies.
Copy !req
816. Point taken. But, no.
Copy !req
817. You don’t get to say "no" to me.
Copy !req
818. It’s my job to say "no" to you
when you’re wrong.
Copy !req
819. So you have the job now?
Copy !req
820. Uh, I’m considering it.
Copy !req
821. I’m starting to see
where you got your reputation.
Copy !req
822. My favorite response?
Copy !req
823. "Oppenheimer couldn’t run
a hamburger stand."
Copy !req
824. I couldn’t.
Copy !req
825. But I can run
the Manhattan Project.
Copy !req
826. There’s a way to balance
these things.
Copy !req
827. Keep the Rad Lab here at
Berkeley under Lawrence.
Copy !req
828. Met Lab in Chicago
under Szilard.
Copy !req
829. Large scale refining,
where did you say? Tennessee.
Copy !req
830. And Hanford.
And Hanford.
Copy !req
831. All America’s industrial might
and scientific innovation,
Copy !req
832. connected by rail.
Copy !req
833. Focused on one goal.
Copy !req
834. One point in space and time.
And it comes together here.
Copy !req
835. A secret laboratory.
Copy !req
836. In the middle of nowhere,
secure, self-sufficient,
Copy !req
837. equipment, housing, the works.
Copy !req
838. Keep everyone there
until it’s done.
Copy !req
839. - I’ll need the schools, stores, a church.
- Why?
Copy !req
840. If we don’t let scientists bring their
families, we’ll never get the best.
Copy !req
841. You want security,
build a town, build it fast.
Copy !req
842. Where?
Copy !req
843. Welcome to Los Alamos.
Copy !req
844. Now, there’s a boys’ school
we’ll have to commandeer
Copy !req
845. and the local Indians
come up here for burial rites.
Copy !req
846. But, apart from that, nothing.
Copy !req
847. Forty miles. Any direction.
Copy !req
848. Enough to find the perfect spot.
Copy !req
849. - What for?
- Success.
Copy !req
850. Build him a town. Fast.
Copy !req
851. Let’s go recruit
some scientists.
Copy !req
852. Why would I leave my family?
Copy !req
853. I told you,
you can bring your family.
Copy !req
854. I’m not a soldier, Oppie.
Copy !req
855. A soldier?
He’s a general.
Copy !req
856. I’ve got all the soldier I need.
Copy !req
857. What can I tell them?
Copy !req
858. Heisenberg, Diebner,
Bothe, Bohr.
Copy !req
859. What do these men
have in common?
Copy !req
860. The greatest minds
on atomic theory.
Copy !req
861. Yes, and?
Uh...
Copy !req
862. As much as you like,
Copy !req
863. until you feel my boot
on your balls.
Copy !req
864. You know isotopes
Copy !req
865. and you know explosives,
better than anyone in the world.
Copy !req
866. But you can’t tell us
what you’re doing.
Copy !req
867. I don’t know.
The Nazis have them.
Copy !req
868. Niels Bohr’s in Copenhagen.
Under Nazi occupation.
Copy !req
869. Did they stop printing
newspapers in Princeton?
Copy !req
870. Why would we go to the middle of
nowhere for who knows how long?
Copy !req
871. A year or two.
Or three.
Copy !req
872. General, could you
give us a moment?
Copy !req
873. It’s about unleashing
the strong force
Copy !req
874. before the Nazis do.
Copy !req
875. Oh, my God.
Copy !req
876. Niels won’t work for
the Nazis. No, never.
Copy !req
877. But while they have him,
we don’t.
Copy !req
878. That’s why I need you.
Copy !req
879. Why would you think I’d do that?
Copy !req
880. Why? Why?
Copy !req
881. How about because this is
the most important fucking thing
Copy !req
882. to ever happen in the
history of the world.
Copy !req
883. How about that?
Fuck.
Copy !req
884. They are not gonna let me
onto this project.
Copy !req
885. And failing a security check is
not gonna be good for a career,
Copy !req
886. even after the war.
Copy !req
887. So you’re a fellow traveler.
Copy !req
888. So what?
This is a national emergency.
Copy !req
889. I’ve got some skeletons,
they put me in charge.
Copy !req
890. They need us.
Copy !req
891. Until they don’t.
Copy !req
892. Is there any chance
of getting Bohr out of Denmark?
Copy !req
893. Nah, no dice.
Copy !req
894. I checked with the British.
Copy !req
895. Until we get Allied boots
back onto the continent,
Copy !req
896. there’s just no way.
Copy !req
897. Is he that important?
Copy !req
898. How many people do you know
who’ve proved Einstein wrong?
Copy !req
899. You know, it really would
be quicker to take a plane.
Copy !req
900. No, plane’s too risky.
Copy !req
901. Country needs us.
Copy !req
902. The Harvard guys, they say the
building’s too small for the cyclotron.
Copy !req
903. Get them together
with the architects.
Copy !req
904. When’s this place
supposed to open?
Copy !req
905. Two months.
Copy !req
906. Robert, you’re the great
improviser, but this...
Copy !req
907. you can’t do in your head.
Copy !req
908. Four divisions.
Copy !req
909. Experimental, Theoretical,
Metallurgical, Ordnance.
Copy !req
910. Who’s running Theoretical?
Copy !req
911. I am.
Copy !req
912. That’s what I was afraid of.
You’re spread too thin.
Copy !req
913. So you take Theoretical.
Copy !req
914. I’m not coming here, Robert.
Copy !req
915. Why not?
Copy !req
916. You drop a bomb, and it
falls on the just and the unjust.
Copy !req
917. I don’t wish the culmination
of three centuries of physics
Copy !req
918. to be a weapon
of mass destruction.
Copy !req
919. Izzy.
Copy !req
920. I don’t know if we can be
trusted with such a weapon.
Copy !req
921. But I know the Nazis can’t.
Copy !req
922. We have no choice.
Copy !req
923. Then...
Copy !req
924. the second thing you’ll have
to do is appoint Hans Bethe
Copy !req
925. to run the theoretical division.
Copy !req
926. Wait, what was the first?
Copy !req
927. Take off that ridiculous
uniform. You’re a scientist.
Copy !req
928. Groves is insisting we join.
Copy !req
929. Tell Groves
to go shit in his hat.
Copy !req
930. They need us for who we are.
Copy !req
931. So be yourself.
Only better.
Copy !req
932. This is the only key.
Copy !req
933. And Teller’s already here.
Shall I just show him in?
Copy !req
934. No, let’s wait for the others.
Copy !req
935. Let’s get started.
Copy !req
936. Hello, Edward.
Copy !req
937. Yes.
Copy !req
938. Gentlemen, so, we will work here
Copy !req
939. until the T-section
at Los Alamos is finished.
Copy !req
940. Edward, can I please--
Copy !req
941. It is more important.
Copy !req
942. When I calculated
the chain reaction,
Copy !req
943. I found a rather
troubling possibility.
Copy !req
944. No. This can’t be right.
Copy !req
945. Show me how you did
your calculations.
Copy !req
946. Yes.
Copy !req
947. It’s exponential.
No. No, no, no. No.
Copy !req
948. This is fantasy.
Copy !req
949. Teller’s calculations
can’t be right.
Copy !req
950. Do them yourself
while I go to Princeton.
Copy !req
951. What for?
To talk to Einstein.
Copy !req
952. There’s not much common
ground between you two.
Copy !req
953. That’s why I should
get his view.
Copy !req
954. - Albert.
- Mmm?
Copy !req
955. Ah, Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
956. Well, have you met Dr. Gödel?
We walk here most days.
Copy !req
957. Trees are the most
inspiring structures.
Copy !req
958. Albert, might I have a word?
Copy !req
959. Of course. Excuse me, Kurt.
Copy !req
960. You know, some days,
Kurt refuses to eat.
Copy !req
961. Even in Princeton.
Copy !req
962. He’s convinced that the
Nazis can poison his food.
Copy !req
963. Hmm?
Copy !req
964. Wha--
Copy !req
965. Whose-- Whose work is this?
Copy !req
966. Teller’s.
Copy !req
967. What do you take it to mean?
Copy !req
968. Neutrons smash into nucleus,
Copy !req
969. releasing neutrons
to smash into other nuclei.
Copy !req
970. Criticality,
a point of no return,
Copy !req
971. massive explosive force.
Copy !req
972. But this time, the chain
reaction doesn’t stop.
Copy !req
973. It would ignite the atmosphere.
Copy !req
974. When we detonate
an atomic device,
Copy !req
975. we might start
a chain reaction that...
Copy !req
976. destroys the world.
Copy !req
977. So here we are, hmm?
Copy !req
978. Lost in your quantum world
of probabilities
Copy !req
979. and needing certainty.
Copy !req
980. Can you run
the calculations yourself?
Copy !req
981. About the only thing you and I have in
common is a disdain for mathematics.
Copy !req
982. Who’s working on this
in Berkeley? Hans Bethe.
Copy !req
983. Well, he’ll get to the truth.
Copy !req
984. And if the truth
is catastrophic?
Copy !req
985. Then you stop.
Copy !req
986. And you share your findings
with the Nazis.
Copy !req
987. So neither side
destroys the world.
Copy !req
988. Robert.
Copy !req
989. This is yours, not mine.
Copy !req
990. Teller’s wrong.
Copy !req
991. He’s wrong.
Shh, shh, shh...
Copy !req
992. When you know Teller’s
critical assumptions,
Copy !req
993. the real picture emerges.
Copy !req
994. Bottom line?
Copy !req
995. The chances of an uncontrolled
nuclear reaction are near zero.
Copy !req
996. Near zero.
Copy !req
997. Oppie, this is good news.
Copy !req
998. Mmm.
Copy !req
999. Can you run them again?
No, you’ll get the same answer.
Copy !req
1000. Till they actually detonate
one of these things,
Copy !req
1001. the best assurance
you’re going to get is this.
Copy !req
1002. Near zero.
Copy !req
1003. Theory will
take you only so far. Mmm.
Copy !req
1004. - Hello!
- Hello, you. We missed him.
Copy !req
1005. You want to adopt?
She’s kidding.
Copy !req
1006. We wanted to see you
before we left.
Copy !req
1007. For parts unknown.
Copy !req
1008. You know who I ran into
the other day? Eltenton.
Copy !req
1009. Huh.
Copy !req
1010. The chemist from Shell?
The union guy?
Copy !req
1011. Yeah. The FAECT guy.
Copy !req
1012. He was moaning about
how we’re handling the war.
Copy !req
1013. How so?
Copy !req
1014. Lack of cooperation
with our allies.
Copy !req
1015. Apparently our government’s not
sharing any research with the Russians.
Copy !req
1016. Well, he said, "Most scientists
think the policy is stupid."
Copy !req
1017. Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
Copy !req
1018. He mentioned that if anyone had
anything they wanted to pass on,
Copy !req
1019. going around official
channels, that he could help.
Copy !req
1020. That would be treason.
Copy !req
1021. Yes, of course.
Copy !req
1022. I just thought you should know.
Copy !req
1023. The brat is down.
Where are the martinis?
Copy !req
1024. Coming right up.
Copy !req
1025. The conversation ended there.
Copy !req
1026. Nothing in our long-standing
friendship would have led me to believe
Copy !req
1027. that Chevalier was
actually seeking information,
Copy !req
1028. and I am certain that he had no idea
of the work in which I was engaged.
Copy !req
1029. It has long been clear to me
Copy !req
1030. that I should have reported
this incident at once.
Copy !req
1031. The Oppenheimer situation
highlights the tension
Copy !req
1032. between scientists
and the security apparatus.
Copy !req
1033. In hopes of learning how the
nominee handled such issues
Copy !req
1034. during his time at the AEC,
Copy !req
1035. we’ll have a scientist
appearing before the committee.
Copy !req
1036. Who are they bringing in?
They haven’t said.
Copy !req
1037. Mr. Chairman, if I may,
Copy !req
1038. I’m nominated
for commerce secretary.
Copy !req
1039. Why seek the opinion
of scientists?
Copy !req
1040. This is a cabinet post, Admiral.
Copy !req
1041. We seek a wide range of opinion.
Copy !req
1042. Well, I’d like to know the name
of the scientist testifying,
Copy !req
1043. I’d like the chance
to cross-examine.
Copy !req
1044. This is not a court.
Copy !req
1045. Formality, huh?
Copy !req
1046. No presidential Cabinet nominee
has failed to be confirmed since 1925.
Copy !req
1047. This is just how
the game is played.
Copy !req
1048. It’s in the bag, Lewis.
So play nice.
Copy !req
1049. They bring in a scientist,
so what?
Copy !req
1050. You don’t know scientists
like I do, Counselor.
Copy !req
1051. They resent anyone
who questions their judgment,
Copy !req
1052. especially if you’re not
one of them.
Copy !req
1053. I was chair of the AEC.
Copy !req
1054. I’m easy to blame
for what happened to Robert.
Copy !req
1055. We can’t have the Senate
thinking the scientific community
Copy !req
1056. doesn’t support you, sir.
Copy !req
1057. - Or should we pivot?
- To what?
Copy !req
1058. And embrace it.
Copy !req
1059. "I fought Oppenheimer
and the US won."
Copy !req
1060. I-I don’t think
we need to go there.
Copy !req
1061. Isn’t there someone we can call
who knows what really happened?
Copy !req
1062. - Teller.
- He’ll make an impression.
Copy !req
1063. - Can you get the name of the scientist they’ve called?
- Probably.
Copy !req
1064. Find out if he was based in
Chicago or Los Alamos during the war.
Copy !req
1065. - Why does that matter?
- If he was based in Chicago,
Copy !req
1066. he worked under Szilard
and Fermi,
Copy !req
1067. not the cult of Oppie
at Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1068. Robert built that damn place.
Copy !req
1069. He was founder, mayor, sheriff,
all rolled into one.
Copy !req
1070. All it needs is a saloon.
Copy !req
1071. Let’s go and see.
Copy !req
1072. There’s no kitchen.
Copy !req
1073. Really? We’ll fix that.
Copy !req
1074. Barbed wire? Guns? Oppie.
Copy !req
1075. We’re at war, Hans.
Copy !req
1076. Halifax, 1917.
Copy !req
1077. A cargo ship carrying munitions
explodes in the harbor.
Copy !req
1078. A vast and sudden
chemical reaction.
Copy !req
1079. The biggest man-made
explosion in history.
Copy !req
1080. Now let’s calculate how much
more destructive it would have been
Copy !req
1081. if it were a nuclear,
and not a chemical, reaction.
Copy !req
1082. Expressing power
in terms of tons of TNT.
Copy !req
1083. But it will be thousands.
Copy !req
1084. Well, then... kilotons.
Copy !req
1085. Using U-235, the
bomb will need-- Ah...
Copy !req
1086. Right, sorry.
Copy !req
1087. Gadget will need a 33-pound
sphere about this size.
Copy !req
1088. Or using plutonium,
the ten-pound sphere.
Copy !req
1089. Here’s the amount of uranium
Oak Ridge refined all of last month.
Copy !req
1090. And the Hanford plant
made this much plutonium.
Copy !req
1091. Now, if we can enrich these amounts,
we need a way to detonate them.
Copy !req
1092. Are we boring you, Edward?
Copy !req
1093. A little bit, yes.
Copy !req
1094. May I ask why?
Copy !req
1095. We all entered this room knowing
a fission bomb was possible.
Copy !req
1096. - How about we leave it with something new?
- Such as?
Copy !req
1097. Instead of uranium or plutonium,
we use hydrogen.
Copy !req
1098. Heavy hydrogen.
Copy !req
1099. Deuterium.
Copy !req
1100. You see?
Copy !req
1101. We compact the atoms together
under great pressure
Copy !req
1102. to induce a fusion reaction.
Copy !req
1103. Then we’ll get not kilotons,
Copy !req
1104. but megatons.
Copy !req
1105. Okay, hang on, hang on.
Copy !req
1106. So how do you generate enough
force to fuse hydrogen atoms?
Copy !req
1107. A small fission bomb.
Copy !req
1108. Ah...
There we are!
Copy !req
1109. Well, since we’re going
to need one anyway,
Copy !req
1110. can we get back
to the business at hand?
Copy !req
1111. The isotopes issue wasn’t your
most important policy disagreement
Copy !req
1112. with Dr. Oppenheimer,
Copy !req
1113. it was the hydrogen bomb,
wasn’t it?
Copy !req
1114. As colleagues, we agreed to
disagree on a great many things, uh,
Copy !req
1115. and, well, one of them was the
need for an H-bomb program, yes.
Copy !req
1116. Thanks for convening
on short notice.
Copy !req
1117. I can’t believe it.
Copy !req
1118. Here we are.
Copy !req
1119. Catch me up.
What do we know?
Copy !req
1120. One of our B-29s over the North
Pacific has detected radiation.
Copy !req
1121. Do we have the filter paper?
Copy !req
1122. - There’s no doubt what this is.
- White House says there’s a doubt.
Copy !req
1123. Wishful thinking, I’m afraid.
Copy !req
1124. Are those the long-range
detection filter papers?
Copy !req
1125. It’s an atomic test.
Copy !req
1126. The Russians have a bomb.
Copy !req
1127. We’re supposed to be years
ahead of them, but some--
Copy !req
1128. What were you guys doing at
Los Alamos? Wasn’t security tight?
Copy !req
1129. - Of course it was. You weren’t there.
- Forgive me, Doctor...
Copy !req
1130. but I was there.
Copy !req
1131. We can now consider the
actual mechanics of detonation.
Copy !req
1132. Any ideas?
Copy !req
1133. I call this "shooting."
Copy !req
1134. We fire a chunk of fissionable
material into a larger sphere
Copy !req
1135. with enough force
to achieve criticality.
Copy !req
1136. What do we think? Anyone?
Copy !req
1137. I’ve been thinking
about implosion.
Copy !req
1138. Explosives around the sphere
blast inwards, crushing the material.
Copy !req
1139. I’d like to investigate
that idea.
Copy !req
1140. I’ll talk to Ordnance,
get you blowing things up.
Copy !req
1141. - Progress?
- Nice to see you too.
Copy !req
1142. Meet the British contingent.
Copy !req
1143. Dr. Oppenheimer,
Klaus Fuchs.
Copy !req
1144. How long have you been British?
Copy !req
1145. Since Hitler told me
I wasn’t German. Aha.
Copy !req
1146. Come, welcome to Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1147. School’s up and running.
Copy !req
1148. Bar... always running.
Copy !req
1149. And I thought of a way
to reduce support staff.
Copy !req
1150. - Is that--
- Mrs. Serber, yes.
Copy !req
1151. I’ve offered jobs to all the wives.
Admin, librarians, computation.
Copy !req
1152. We cut down on staff,
keep families together.
Copy !req
1153. - Are these women qualified?
- Don’t be absurd.
Copy !req
1154. These are some of the
brightest minds in our community.
Copy !req
1155. And they’re already
security cleared.
Copy !req
1156. I’ve informed General Groves
you’ve been holding
Copy !req
1157. cross-divisional, open
discussions on a nightly basis.
Copy !req
1158. Shut them down.
Copy !req
1159. Compartmentalization is the key
to maintaining security--
Copy !req
1160. It’s only the top men.
Copy !req
1161. Who presumably communicate
with subordinates.
Copy !req
1162. These men aren’t stupid.
They can be discreet.
Copy !req
1163. - I don’t like it.
- You don’t like anything enough for that to be a fair test.
Copy !req
1164. Once a week. Top men only.
Copy !req
1165. - I’d like to bring my brother here.
- No.
Copy !req
1166. Nichols.
Copy !req
1167. I still haven’t heard that my security
clearance has been approved.
Copy !req
1168. - It hasn’t.
- We’re going to Chicago tomorrow.
Copy !req
1169. Well, you should wait.
Copy !req
1170. You are aware that the Nazis
have a two-year head start?
Copy !req
1171. Dr. Oppenheimer, the fact
that your security clearance
Copy !req
1172. is proving difficult to obtain
is not my fault.
Copy !req
1173. It’s yours.
Copy !req
1174. May not be your fault, but it’s
your problem. Because I’m going.
Copy !req
1175. And how many people
were in these, uh,
Copy !req
1176. open discussions?
Copy !req
1177. Too many. Compartmentalization
was supposed to be the protocol.
Copy !req
1178. We were in a race
against the Nazis.
Copy !req
1179. - And now the race is against the Soviets.
- Not unless we start it.
Copy !req
1180. Robert, they just fired
a starting gun.
Copy !req
1181. What’s the nature of the device
they detonated?
Copy !req
1182. The data indicates it may have
been a plutonium implosion device.
Copy !req
1183. Like the one you built
at Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1184. The Russians have a bomb,
Truman needs to know what’s next.
Copy !req
1185. What’s next? Arms talks.
Copy !req
1186. - Arms talks.
- Obviously.
Copy !req
1187. What about the Super?
Copy !req
1188. Does Truman even know about it?
Did we brief him on that?
Copy !req
1189. Not specifically.
Copy !req
1190. We still don’t know
if a hydrogen bomb’s
Copy !req
1191. technically feasible.
Copy !req
1192. My understanding is
that Teller proposed it?
Copy !req
1193. Yes.
At Los Alamos?
Copy !req
1194. Teller’s designs have always
been wildly impractical.
Copy !req
1195. You’d have to deliver
by ox cart.
Copy !req
1196. - Not airplane.
- Oppie.
Copy !req
1197. I’m sorry, Dr. Lawrence.
Do you want to comment?
Copy !req
1198. No.
Copy !req
1199. Because if it can
put us ahead again,
Copy !req
1200. the President of the United
States needs to know about it.
Copy !req
1201. And if the Russians know about it
already from a spy at Los Alamos,
Copy !req
1202. then we’ve gotta get going.
Copy !req
1203. There’s no proof
there was a spy at Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1204. Robert.
Copy !req
1205. They put it
under the football stadium?
Copy !req
1206. The field’s not in use anymore.
Copy !req
1207. Just as well.
Copy !req
1208. - Oppie.
- Dr. Fermi.
Copy !req
1209. Come stai? Va bene?
Copy !req
1210. I hear you got a little
town. Yes. Come and see.
Copy !req
1211. Who could think straight
in a place like that? Huh?
Copy !req
1212. Everybody will go crazy.
Copy !req
1213. Thank you for
the vote of confidence, Szilard.
Copy !req
1214. Do we really-- Do we
really need that in the notes?
Copy !req
1215. When are you going to
try it out?
Copy !req
1216. We did.
Copy !req
1217. The first self-sustaining
nuclear chain reaction.
Copy !req
1218. Didn’t Groves tell you?
Copy !req
1219. No.
Copy !req
1220. One at a time, please.
One at a time.
Copy !req
1221. Dr. Oppenheimer?
Copy !req
1222. I tried Personnel.
They asked if I could type.
Copy !req
1223. Can you?
Copy !req
1224. Harvard forgot to teach that
Copy !req
1225. on the graduate
chemistry course.
Copy !req
1226. Condon, put Mrs. Hornig here
on the plutonium team.
Copy !req
1227. What the hell
were you doing in Chicago?
Copy !req
1228. Visiting the Met?
Copy !req
1229. Why? Because we
have every right--
Copy !req
1230. You have just the rights that
I give you. No more, no less.
Copy !req
1231. We are adults trying
to run a project here.
Copy !req
1232. This is ridiculous.
Copy !req
1233. Tell him.
Copy !req
1234. Compartmentalization
is the protocol we agreed to.
Copy !req
1235. Enough of this madhouse.
Copy !req
1236. Nobody can work
under these conditions.
Copy !req
1237. You know what, Generalissimo?
Copy !req
1238. I quit.
Copy !req
1239. Thanks for nothing.
Copy !req
1240. Better off without him.
Copy !req
1241. Aren’t you more concerned
Copy !req
1242. about his discretion out there?
Copy !req
1243. We’ll have him killed.
Copy !req
1244. I was just kidding.
Copy !req
1245. No, he hates me, not America.
Copy !req
1246. You know, General, not everyone
has levers to pull like mine.
Copy !req
1247. I don’t think I understand.
Copy !req
1248. You didn’t hire me
despite my left-wing past,
Copy !req
1249. you hired me because of it.
Copy !req
1250. So you could control me.
Copy !req
1251. Well, I’m not that subtle.
Copy !req
1252. I’m just a humble soldier.
Copy !req
1253. You’re neither humble,
nor just a soldier.
Copy !req
1254. - You studied engineering at MIT.
- Guilty as charged.
Copy !req
1255. Well, now we understand
each other,
Copy !req
1256. perhaps you can get me
my security clearance
Copy !req
1257. so I can perform
this miracle for you.
Copy !req
1258. General Groves, were you aware of Dr.
Oppenheimer’s
Copy !req
1259. left-wing associations
when you appointed him?
Copy !req
1260. I was aware that there
were suspicions about him.
Copy !req
1261. I was aware he had a very
extreme, liberal background.
Copy !req
1262. In your opinion, would he ever
consciously commit a disloyal act?
Copy !req
1263. I would be amazed if he did.
Copy !req
1264. So you had complete
confidence in his integrity?
Copy !req
1265. At Los Alamos, yes, which
is where I really knew him.
Copy !req
1266. General, did your security
officers on the project
Copy !req
1267. advise you against the
clearance of Dr. Oppenheimer?
Copy !req
1268. They could not and would not
clear him until I insisted.
Copy !req
1269. And it’s safe to say that you had a pretty good
knowledge of Dr. Oppenheimer’s security file.
Copy !req
1270. I did.
Copy !req
1271. There’s only really one question
I need answered here today.
Copy !req
1272. In light of
the current AEC guidelines,
Copy !req
1273. would you clear
Dr. Oppenheimer today?
Copy !req
1274. Do you have the guidelines?
Copy !req
1275. Under current AEC guidelines,
Copy !req
1276. would you clear
Dr. Oppenheimer today?
Copy !req
1277. Physics and New Mexico, huh?
Copy !req
1278. My God.
Copy !req
1279. What a trek.
Copy !req
1280. That’s why you need a liaison.
Copy !req
1281. I’m appointing Lomanitz.
Copy !req
1282. You’re gonna be okay.
Copy !req
1283. This way, gentlemen.
Copy !req
1284. - Dr. Lawrence.
- Leslie.
Copy !req
1285. I’d like to remind you what
we talked about in Berkeley.
Copy !req
1286. Compartmentalization.
I understand completely.
Copy !req
1287. Thank you.
Copy !req
1288. Greetings from Berkeley.
Copy !req
1289. I am here to update you on our
progress and solicit your input.
Copy !req
1290. To do so, I am going to
have to share a few things
Copy !req
1291. that General Groves
told me not to.
Copy !req
1292. Sorry, General, I said I
understood, not that I agreed.
Copy !req
1293. Okay.
Copy !req
1294. Gentlemen, to business.
Copy !req
1295. There were rumors of
espionage at Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1296. Unsubstantiated.
Copy !req
1297. I’m told that there
were communists on the project.
Copy !req
1298. We didn’t knowingly employ
any communists.
Copy !req
1299. Were any of them involved
in discussions of the Super?
Copy !req
1300. I seem to remember you demanding
your brother come to Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1301. My brother had left
the Party by then.
Copy !req
1302. What about Lomanitz?
Copy !req
1303. Lomanitz was never employed
at Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1304. He was a liaison.
Copy !req
1305. Our security was tight,
Copy !req
1306. as former Colonel Nichols
well knows.
Copy !req
1307. Our security was as tight as it could
be given the personalities involved,
Copy !req
1308. but attempts were made.
Copy !req
1309. - What is that supposed to mean?
- We’ve all read his file here.
Copy !req
1310. Do we need to talk
about Jean Tatlock?
Copy !req
1311. Or the Chevalier incident?
Copy !req
1312. Excuse me.
Copy !req
1313. That’s Lomanitz, on line one.
Copy !req
1314. Hello, Rossi.
Copy !req
1315. What? Okay, just calm down.
Copy !req
1316. There’s been another screw-up.
Copy !req
1317. Lomanitz just got drafted.
Copy !req
1318. - We are at war, Doctor.
- Don’t be an asshole, Nichols.
Copy !req
1319. We need this kid.
Fix it, will you?
Copy !req
1320. It wasn’t a mistake.
Copy !req
1321. Your friend Lomanitz
has been trying
Copy !req
1322. to unionize the Radiation Lab.
Copy !req
1323. He promised to quit all that.
Copy !req
1324. Well, he hasn’t.
Copy !req
1325. Security officer at Berkeley’s
concerned about communist infiltration
Copy !req
1326. through that union, the FA--
Copy !req
1327. FAECT.
Copy !req
1328. Well, I’m there next week,
I’ll...
Copy !req
1329. drop in to see him.
Copy !req
1330. Your Q clearance came through.
Copy !req
1331. It’s important you not maintain or
renew any questionable associations.
Copy !req
1332. Doctor,
did you think social contacts
Copy !req
1333. between a person engaged on secret
war work and communists was dangerous?
Copy !req
1334. My awareness of the danger
would be greater today.
Copy !req
1335. I mean, it’s fair to say
that during the war years,
Copy !req
1336. you felt that such contacts
were potentially dangerous?
Copy !req
1337. Were conceivably dangerous, yes.
Copy !req
1338. I mean, really?
Known communists?
Copy !req
1339. Look...
Copy !req
1340. I’ve had a lot of secrets
in my head for a long time.
Copy !req
1341. Doesn’t matter
who I associate with.
Copy !req
1342. I don’t talk
about those secrets.
Copy !req
1343. You said in your statement
Copy !req
1344. that you had to
Copy !req
1345. see Jean Tatlock in 1943.
Copy !req
1346. You left.
Copy !req
1347. Not a word.
Copy !req
1348. What did you think
that would do to me?
Copy !req
1349. I wrote.
Copy !req
1350. Pages of nothing.
Copy !req
1351. Where did you go?
Copy !req
1352. I can’t tell you.
Why not?
Copy !req
1353. Because you’re a communist.
Copy !req
1354. Why did you have to see her?
Copy !req
1355. Because she had indicated a
great desire to see me before we left.
Copy !req
1356. At that time, I couldn’t, but I
felt that she had to see me.
Copy !req
1357. She was undergoing
psychiatric treatment.
Copy !req
1358. She was extremely unhappy.
Copy !req
1359. Did you find out
why she had to see you?
Copy !req
1360. Because she was still
in love with me.
Copy !req
1361. Spent the night together,
didn’t you?
Copy !req
1362. Yes.
Copy !req
1363. You drop in and out of my life
Copy !req
1364. and you don’t have to
tell me why.
Copy !req
1365. Now, that’s power.
Copy !req
1366. Not that I enjoy.
Copy !req
1367. I’d rather be here for you
as you need.
Copy !req
1368. But you have
other priorities now.
Copy !req
1369. I have a wife and child.
Copy !req
1370. That’s not what either of us
is talking about.
Copy !req
1371. Jean.
Copy !req
1372. You asked me to come.
Copy !req
1373. And I’m glad I did.
Copy !req
1374. But I can’t see you again.
Copy !req
1375. But what if I need you?
Copy !req
1376. You said
you would always answer.
Copy !req
1377. Not a word.
Copy !req
1378. Did you think that
consistent with good security?
Copy !req
1379. As a matter of fact, it was.
Not a word.
Copy !req
1380. When did you see her after that?
Copy !req
1381. I never saw her again.
Copy !req
1382. I can make the last train
back to Princeton.
Copy !req
1383. Kitty, I didn’t say anything
that I hadn’t already told you.
Copy !req
1384. Today you said it to history,
didn’t you? This is a closed hearing.
Copy !req
1385. If they don’t release the
transcript, I’m sure you will.
Copy !req
1386. I was under oath.
Copy !req
1387. Well, you were
under an oath to me
Copy !req
1388. when you went to see Jean.
Copy !req
1389. You know, you...
Copy !req
1390. you sit there,
Copy !req
1391. day after day,
Copy !req
1392. letting them
pick our lives to pieces.
Copy !req
1393. Why won’t you fight?
Copy !req
1394. Robert, I’m not
putting her up there.
Copy !req
1395. Dr. Oppenheimer, it’s an honor.
Please, take a seat.
Copy !req
1396. No need, I just wanted to check
Copy !req
1397. whether I should talk to Lomanitz
while I’m here, given your concerns.
Copy !req
1398. Well, I’d say that’s really up to
you, Professor, but I’d be cautious.
Copy !req
1399. Uh-huh. Understood.
Copy !req
1400. Oh, and, um...
...as regards to the union,
Copy !req
1401. I wanted to give you a heads-up
on a man named Eltenton.
Copy !req
1402. - A heads-up?
- Yes.
Copy !req
1403. Just that he might
merit watching, is all.
Copy !req
1404. I’d love to get more details.
Copy !req
1405. Well, I have an appointment now,
and I leave early tomorrow.
Copy !req
1406. Well, come back as early as you
like. Since you haven’t time now.
Copy !req
1407. You went back the next morning.
Copy !req
1408. I did. I had to, really.
Copy !req
1409. This time there was another man.
Copy !req
1410. He said his name was Pash.
Copy !req
1411. Pash. You met Colonel Pash?
Copy !req
1412. Colonel Pash, could you
please read from your memo
Copy !req
1413. dated June 29, 1943?
Copy !req
1414. "Results of surveillance
conducted on subject
Copy !req
1415. indicate further possible
Communist Party connections.
Copy !req
1416. Subject met with, and spent
considerable time with,
Copy !req
1417. one Jean Tatlock, communist,
Copy !req
1418. the record of whom is attached."
Copy !req
1419. - The subject being Dr. Oppenheimer?
- Yes.
Copy !req
1420. Whom you had not met?
Copy !req
1421. Not then, but soon after.
Copy !req
1422. He’s the head of security for
the project. Shouldn’t I know him?
Copy !req
1423. No, he should know you. I would
never put you in a room with Pash.
Copy !req
1424. Why not?
Copy !req
1425. When Pash first heard
about Lomanitz,
Copy !req
1426. he told the FBI
he was gonna kidnap him,
Copy !req
1427. take him out on a boat
Copy !req
1428. and interrogate him
in the Russian manner.
Copy !req
1429. General Groves has placed in me
a certain responsibility,
Copy !req
1430. and it’s like having a child
who I can’t see.
Copy !req
1431. By remote control.
Copy !req
1432. So to actually meet you is...
Copy !req
1433. - I won’t take up too much of your time.
- No, not at all.
Copy !req
1434. Whatever time you choose.
Copy !req
1435. Mr. Johnson told me of a
conversation you had yesterday
Copy !req
1436. in which I’m very interested.
Copy !req
1437. It’s had me worried all day.
Copy !req
1438. Yes, well, I didn’t want to talk to
Lomanitz without authorization.
Copy !req
1439. That’s not the particular
interest that I have.
Copy !req
1440. It’s something
a little bit more...
Copy !req
1441. in my opinion, more serious.
Copy !req
1442. Now, when the FBI pointed out
that such information
Copy !req
1443. wouldn’t be admissible in court,
Copy !req
1444. Pash made it clear he had no
intention of leaving any witness left
Copy !req
1445. to prosecute.
Copy !req
1446. Now, the FBI talked him down,
Copy !req
1447. but that’s the man
you’re dancing with.
Copy !req
1448. I gather you’ve heard
there are other parties
Copy !req
1449. interested in the work
of the Radiation Lab?
Copy !req
1450. A man attached
to the Soviet Consul
Copy !req
1451. indicated through
intermediate people
Copy !req
1452. to people on this project
Copy !req
1453. that he was in a position
Copy !req
1454. to transmit information.
Copy !req
1455. Why would anyone on the project
wanna do that?
Copy !req
1456. Frankly, I can see
that there might be an argument
Copy !req
1457. for the commander-in-chief
informing the Russians.
Copy !req
1458. They’re our allies after all.
Copy !req
1459. But I don’t like the idea
of it going out the back door.
Copy !req
1460. It might not hurt
to be on the lookout for it.
Copy !req
1461. And you said that to Pash?
Copy !req
1462. I was trying to put it in the
context of "Russia’s not Germany."
Copy !req
1463. Boris Pash is the son
of a Russian Orthodox bishop.
Copy !req
1464. Born here, but in 1918,
Copy !req
1465. he went back to Russia
to fight the Bolsheviks.
Copy !req
1466. This is a man who has killed
communists with his own hands.
Copy !req
1467. I’m not the judge of who should
or should not have information.
Copy !req
1468. It’s my business to stop it
from going through illegally.
Copy !req
1469. Would you be
a little more specific?
Copy !req
1470. There’s a man whose name was
mentioned to me a couple of times.
Copy !req
1471. Eltenton.
Copy !req
1472. Uh, I believe he’s a chemist
who works at Shell.
Copy !req
1473. He talked to a friend of his
Copy !req
1474. who’s an acquaintance
of someone on the project.
Copy !req
1475. And you thought Pash
would be satisfied with that?
Copy !req
1476. I was attempting to give them
Eltenton without opening a can of worms.
Copy !req
1477. I told them
a cock-and-bull story.
Copy !req
1478. Did you lie
to General Groves too?
Copy !req
1479. No. I admitted to him
that I’d lied to Pash.
Copy !req
1480. Do you recall this conversation
about the Chevalier incident?
Copy !req
1481. I’ve seen
so many versions of it,
Copy !req
1482. I wasn’t confused before but
I’m certainly getting there now.
Copy !req
1483. What was your conclusion?
Copy !req
1484. That he was
under the influence of
Copy !req
1485. the typical
American schoolboy attitude
Copy !req
1486. that there’s something wicked
about telling on a friend.
Copy !req
1487. Well, now...
Copy !req
1488. Might we know through whom
the contact was made?
Copy !req
1489. That would involve people
who are not to be involved in this.
Copy !req
1490. Is that someone
a member of the project?
Copy !req
1491. - A member of the faculty, yes, but not in the project, no.
- Ah.
Copy !req
1492. So Eltenton made his approach through
a member of the faculty here at Berkeley?
Copy !req
1493. As far as I know--
As far as I know, yes.
Copy !req
1494. But...
...there may have been
Copy !req
1495. more than one person involved.
Copy !req
1496. Gentlemen, if I-- If I seem
uncooperative, I think you can understand
Copy !req
1497. it’s because of my insistence
Copy !req
1498. in not getting innocent people
into trouble.
Copy !req
1499. You’re trying to protect your
friend. Who’s protecting you?
Copy !req
1500. - Well, you could.
- If you gave me the name.
Copy !req
1501. If you order me to, I’ll do it.
Copy !req
1502. That is a mistake, Robert.
You need to volunteer this name.
Copy !req
1503. - And did he give you the name?
- He did.
Copy !req
1504. But not then, did he?
No.
Copy !req
1505. No. In fact, it was some
months later, wasn’t it?
Copy !req
1506. It was.
Copy !req
1507. - You see me as persistent.
- Well, you are--
Copy !req
1508. You are persistent,
but that is your job.
Copy !req
1509. And-And my job is to protect
the people that work for me.
Copy !req
1510. Instead of us going on certain steps,
which may come to your attention...
Copy !req
1511. and be disturbing to you,
Copy !req
1512. I would like to discuss those
with you first.
Copy !req
1513. I’m not formulating a plan. I’ll
just have to digest the whole thing.
Copy !req
1514. In the months in between your
interview with Dr. Oppenheimer
Copy !req
1515. and his eventual
naming of Chevalier,
Copy !req
1516. did you expend resources trying to
find the name of the intermediary?
Copy !req
1517. Considerable resources, yes.
Copy !req
1518. Without the name,
our job was extremely difficult.
Copy !req
1519. And when did you
receive the name?
Copy !req
1520. I was gone by the time
Oppenheimer finally offered it up.
Copy !req
1521. - Gone?
- They felt my time would be better spent in Europe
Copy !req
1522. determining the status
of the Nazi bomb project.
Copy !req
1523. Who did?
Copy !req
1524. General Groves.
Copy !req
1525. He transferred me to London.
Copy !req
1526. It’s a little early
for a Christmas party.
Copy !req
1527. Something’s up.
Tolman’s been away.
Copy !req
1528. Where?
Copy !req
1529. Ruth won’t tell.
Copy !req
1530. Hey!
Copy !req
1531. Come on, Ruthie. Can’t
tell me, who can you tell?
Copy !req
1532. Compartmentalization, Oppie.
Copy !req
1533. What makes you think
I know where he is anyway?
Copy !req
1534. ’Cause you do
a pretty good job of knowing
Copy !req
1535. where Mr. Tolman is
when it counts.
Copy !req
1536. Like now?
Copy !req
1537. Attention!
Copy !req
1538. Early Christmas present
for you all.
Copy !req
1539. The British pilots
put me in the bomb bay.
Copy !req
1540. Showed me the-the oxygen,
you know, but I messed it up.
Copy !req
1541. When they opened me up in
Scotland, I was unconscious.
Copy !req
1542. But I pretended
I’d been napping.
Copy !req
1543. Please enjoy your party.
Copy !req
1544. Is it big enough?
Copy !req
1545. To end the war?
Copy !req
1546. To end all war.
Copy !req
1547. Heisenberg sought me out
in Copenhagen.
Copy !req
1548. It was chilling, my old
student working for the Nazis.
Copy !req
1549. He told me some things
to draw me out.
Copy !req
1550. Sustained fission reactions
in uranium.
Copy !req
1551. That sounds more like
a reactor than a bomb.
Copy !req
1552. Did he mention
gaseous diffusion?
Copy !req
1553. He seemed more focused
on heavy water.
Copy !req
1554. As a moderator?
Copy !req
1555. Yes, instead of graphite.
Copy !req
1556. What?
Copy !req
1557. He took a wrong turn.
We’re ahead.
Copy !req
1558. And with you here
to help us, Niels...
Copy !req
1559. Sorry, could you-- could you
give us a moment, gentlemen?
Copy !req
1560. I am not here to help, Robert.
Copy !req
1561. I knew you could do this
without me.
Copy !req
1562. Then why did you come?
To talk about after.
Copy !req
1563. The power you’re about to reveal
will forever outlive the Nazis.
Copy !req
1564. And the world is not prepared.
Copy !req
1565. "You could lift the stone without being
ready for the snake that’s revealed."
Copy !req
1566. We have to make
the politicians understand,
Copy !req
1567. this isn’t a new weapon.
Copy !req
1568. It’s a new world.
Copy !req
1569. I’ll be out there
doing what I can, but you...
Copy !req
1570. You are an American Prometheus.
Copy !req
1571. The man who gave them the power
to destroy themselves,
Copy !req
1572. and they’ll respect that.
Copy !req
1573. Then your work really begins.
Copy !req
1574. I’m sorry, Oppie,
but there’s a call.
Copy !req
1575. From San Francisco.
Copy !req
1576. Robert?
Copy !req
1577. Robert?
Copy !req
1578. Robert. Robert.
Copy !req
1579. Oh, my God.
What’s the matter?
Copy !req
1580. What happened?
Copy !req
1581. Her father called.
Copy !req
1582. They found her yesterday
in the bath.
Copy !req
1583. Who?
Copy !req
1584. She’d taken pills.
Copy !req
1585. Left a note, not signed.
Copy !req
1586. She took barbiturates, but there
was chloral hydrate in her blood.
Copy !req
1587. There was a note.
Copy !req
1588. Jean Tatlock?
Copy !req
1589. We were together.
Copy !req
1590. She said she needed me. I...
Copy !req
1591. - I told her I...
- ...I wouldn’t--
Copy !req
1592. I told her I couldn’t--
Copy !req
1593. No, it was-- it was me--
Copy !req
1594. You don’t get to commit the sin
Copy !req
1595. and then have us all feel sorry
for you that it had consequences.
Copy !req
1596. You pull yourself together.
Copy !req
1597. You know,
people here depend on you.
Copy !req
1598. Donald, would you like to
contribute here, please?
Copy !req
1599. You’re on your own, pal.
Copy !req
1600. Bob, I’m not quitting my job
because plutonium is radioactive.
Copy !req
1601. We just don’t know what it might do
to the female reproductive system--
Copy !req
1602. Your reproductive system
is more exposed than mine, presumably.
Copy !req
1603. Can we please? The
implosion device is nowhere.
Copy !req
1604. You can’t rush everything.
Oppie, please.
Copy !req
1605. Well, there’s rushing and there’s
getting on with it, so, pick one.
Copy !req
1606. Wait. Neddermeyer’s
doing his job.
Copy !req
1607. Teller’s not helping.
You’re not helping.
Copy !req
1608. I’ve been asking for calculations
on the implosion lenses for weeks.
Copy !req
1609. - The British can do it. Fuchs.
- Absolutely.
Copy !req
1610. - It’s your job, Teller.
- I’m engaged in research.
Copy !req
1611. On a hydrogen bomb
we’re not even building.
Copy !req
1612. I won’t work for that man.
Copy !req
1613. Let him go.
He’s a prima donna.
Copy !req
1614. I agree.
He should leave Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1615. Okay.
Copy !req
1616. Kisty, you replace Neddermeyer.
Seth, I’m putting you on plutonium.
Copy !req
1617. Lilli, you go work for Kisty,
because he needs you.
Copy !req
1618. Fuchs, you take Teller’s role.
Copy !req
1619. I’m putting you exclusively
on the implosion device.
Copy !req
1620. And no one
is leaving Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1621. They won’t let me leave.
Copy !req
1622. No. I won’t let you leave.
Copy !req
1623. Forget Hans. Forget fission.
Copy !req
1624. Stay here,
research what you want.
Copy !req
1625. Fusion, the hydrogen bomb, whatever.
Copy !req
1626. We’ll meet to discuss.
Copy !req
1627. You don’t have time to meet.
You’re a politician now, Robert.
Copy !req
1628. You’ve left physics behind
many, many years ago.
Copy !req
1629. Once a week.
Copy !req
1630. One hour, you and me.
Copy !req
1631. Now raise this fucking barrier.
Copy !req
1632. So the Super was under development
on your watch at Los Alamos?
Copy !req
1633. Yes.
Copy !req
1634. And yet, after the war,
you tried to deny it was viable.
Copy !req
1635. No, no, no. I-I pointed out
technical difficulties with it.
Copy !req
1636. Didn’t you try to kill it
at the AEC meeting
Copy !req
1637. - after the Russian bomb test?
- No.
Copy !req
1638. But that was the recommendation
of the AEC, was it not?
Copy !req
1639. After hours of discussion
about the best response.
Copy !req
1640. An H-bomb is 1,000 times
the power of an A-bomb.
Copy !req
1641. Its only intended target
would be the largest cities.
Copy !req
1642. It’s a weapon of mass genocide.
Copy !req
1643. Izzy, draw some circles on this side
of the map where they would target us.
Copy !req
1644. Starting with New York.
Copy !req
1645. - That’s fair.
- DC.
Copy !req
1646. It’s a weapon of attack
with no defensive value.
Copy !req
1647. - Deterrence.
- "Deterrence"?
Copy !req
1648. Do we really need more deterrence
than our current arsenal of atomic bombs?
Copy !req
1649. Y-You drown in ten feet of water
or 10,000, what’s the difference?
Copy !req
1650. We can already drown Russia.
They know it.
Copy !req
1651. - Now they can drown us.
- We’re just escalating.
Copy !req
1652. Robert? Robert.
Copy !req
1653. As I said, Teller’s designs
Copy !req
1654. are still as impractical
as they were during the war.
Copy !req
1655. A hydrogen bomb can be made
to work, Oppie, you know that.
Copy !req
1656. I don’t believe we should commit
all our resources to that chance.
Copy !req
1657. Then how would you have Truman
reassure the American people?
Copy !req
1658. Simply by limiting
the spread of atomic weapons
Copy !req
1659. through international control
on nuclear energy.
Copy !req
1660. By which you mean
world government.
Copy !req
1661. The United Nations,
as Roosevelt intended.
Copy !req
1662. Well, I asked
what Truman should do, right?
Copy !req
1663. The world’s changed.
Copy !req
1664. It’s not fascism but communism
that now threatens our survival.
Copy !req
1665. Lewis, do you understand,
Copy !req
1666. if we build a hydrogen bomb,
Copy !req
1667. the Russians will have no choice
but to build their own?
Copy !req
1668. Could they
be working on one already,
Copy !req
1669. based on information gathered
from a spy at Los Alamos?
Copy !req
1670. No spy at Los Alamos.
Copy !req
1671. Gentlemen. Let’s not get
sidetracked. There wasn’t?
Copy !req
1672. I say we use this moment to gain
concessions from the Russians
Copy !req
1673. by committing that we will
not build a hydrogen bomb.
Copy !req
1674. Thereby revealing its existence.
Copy !req
1675. Which you seem convinced
they already know.
Copy !req
1676. All right. At this point,
I’d like the committee members
Copy !req
1677. to meet in privacy
to finalize our recommendations.
Copy !req
1678. I’m just not sure
you wanna go down this road.
Copy !req
1679. Lewis, with respect,
Copy !req
1680. we are the advisory committee,
we will give them our advice.
Copy !req
1681. Dr. Oppenheimer?
Copy !req
1682. Hi.
Copy !req
1683. William Borden. Joint
Committee on Atomic Energy?
Copy !req
1684. Oh, yes, yes.
Copy !req
1685. During the war, I was a pilot.
Copy !req
1686. One night,
flying back from a raid,
Copy !req
1687. I saw an amazing sight,
Copy !req
1688. like a meteor.
Copy !req
1689. A V-2 rocket headed to England.
Copy !req
1690. I can’t help but imagine what it
will be for such an enemy rocket
Copy !req
1691. to carry an atomic warhead.
Copy !req
1692. Well, let’s make sure we’re not
the ones to make that possible.
Copy !req
1693. Oppie, I don’t think you
wanna go up against Strauss.
Copy !req
1694. If we both speak,
they listen to me.
Copy !req
1695. When you speak,
they hear a prophet.
Copy !req
1696. When Strauss speaks,
they hear themselves.
Copy !req
1697. They’ll listen to a prophet.
Copy !req
1698. A prophet can’t be wrong.
Not once.
Copy !req
1699. Didn’t you accuse Oppenheimer of
sabotaging the development of the Super?
Copy !req
1700. I was never one of those to
bandy around terms like "sabotage."
Copy !req
1701. But Mr. Borden was?
Copy !req
1702. As I understand it, possibly.
Copy !req
1703. How was Mr. Borden able to put
together such a detailed indictment?
Copy !req
1704. He was no longer
a government employee,
Copy !req
1705. yet he appears to have had
unlimited access
Copy !req
1706. to Dr. Oppenheimer’s file.
Copy !req
1707. Might Mr. Nichols have
given him access to the file?
Copy !req
1708. Or someone else at the AEC?
Copy !req
1709. That’s a very serious
accusation, Senator.
Copy !req
1710. Is it your intention to suggest
Copy !req
1711. that Dr. Oppenheimer is
disloyal to the United States?
Copy !req
1712. I’ve always assumed,
and still assume,
Copy !req
1713. that he’s loyal
to the United States.
Copy !req
1714. I believe this.
And I shall believe it
Copy !req
1715. until I see very conclusive
proof to the opposite.
Copy !req
1716. Do you, or do you not believe that Dr.
Oppenheimer is a security risk?
Copy !req
1717. And if I may, when Hitler blew
his brains out in that bunker,
Copy !req
1718. it is my humble opinion that there
is no need for that bomb to be seen
Copy !req
1719. anywhere except
for that test site.
Copy !req
1720. We at least have to take
a moment to think about
Copy !req
1721. whether the means justify
the ends any longer, because--
Copy !req
1722. Germany is about to surrender.
Copy !req
1723. It’s no longer the enemy who
are the greatest threat to mankind.
Copy !req
1724. It’s our work.
Copy !req
1725. Hitler is dead, it’s true.
Copy !req
1726. But the Japanese fight on.
Copy !req
1727. Their defeat seems assured.
Copy !req
1728. Not if you’re a GI
preparing to invade.
Copy !req
1729. We can end this war.
Copy !req
1730. But how do we justify using
this weapon on human beings?
Copy !req
1731. We’re theorists, yes?
Copy !req
1732. We imagine a future,
and our imaginings horrify us.
Copy !req
1733. But they won’t fear it
until they understand it,
Copy !req
1734. and they won’t understand it
until they’ve used it.
Copy !req
1735. When the world learns the
terrible secret of Los Alamos,
Copy !req
1736. our work here will ensure a
peace mankind has never seen.
Copy !req
1737. A peace based on the kind
of international cooperation
Copy !req
1738. that Roosevelt always envisaged.
Copy !req
1739. - Progress?
- Two years and a billion dollars’ worth?
Copy !req
1740. Well, hard to put a price on it.
Copy !req
1741. Not really.
Just add up the bills.
Copy !req
1742. "Rural free deliveries." Eighty
babies delivered the first year.
Copy !req
1743. This year we’ve had ten a month.
Copy !req
1744. Birth control is a little out
of my jurisdiction, General.
Copy !req
1745. - Clearly.
- General.
Copy !req
1746. Kiddo.
Copy !req
1747. Head down, every-- Fuchs.
Head down.
Copy !req
1748. That’s the one.
Copy !req
1749. Two viable bombs.
I need a date.
Copy !req
1750. September.
Copy !req
1751. July.
Copy !req
1752. That’s the sweet spot, gentlemen.
Copy !req
1753. August.
Copy !req
1754. July.
Copy !req
1755. Test in July.
But I need my brother.
Copy !req
1756. Frank knows the desert,
he’s left politics behind,
Copy !req
1757. he’s been working with
Lawrence for two years now.
Copy !req
1758. What do we call the test?
Copy !req
1759. "Batter my heart,
three person’d God."
Copy !req
1760. What?
Copy !req
1761. Trinity.
Copy !req
1762. You insisted on bringing on your
brother Frank, a known communist.
Copy !req
1763. Former communist.
Copy !req
1764. You brought
a known former communist
Copy !req
1765. onto America’s most secret
and important defense project.
Copy !req
1766. I knew my brother
could be trusted. Absolutely.
Copy !req
1767. And you felt your judgment was sound
on who on the team could be trusted.
Copy !req
1768. Fuchs, head down.
Okay, everybody ready.
Copy !req
1769. I hope you learned something.
Copy !req
1770. Yeah, we learned we’re gonna
need to be a lot further away.
Copy !req
1771. Well, figure it out. Fast.
Copy !req
1772. We leave for Washington in the
morning. We’re gonna give them a date.
Copy !req
1773. You’re a long way
from Chicago, Leo.
Copy !req
1774. If we don’t act now, they’re going
to use this thing against Japan.
Copy !req
1775. We booked a meeting with
Truman, but somebody killed it.
Copy !req
1776. You’re meeting
the secretary of war.
Copy !req
1777. Just because we’re building it
Copy !req
1778. doesn’t mean we get
to decide how it’s used.
Copy !req
1779. History will judge us, Robert.
Copy !req
1780. In Chicago,
we put together a petition.
Copy !req
1781. I’m not getting into that.
Copy !req
1782. Just tell me your concerns
and I’ll relay them. My concerns?
Copy !req
1783. Germany’s defeated. Japan’s
not going to hold out alone.
Copy !req
1784. How could you know that?
You got us into this.
Copy !req
1785. You and Einstein with your letter to
Roosevelt saying we could build a bomb.
Copy !req
1786. Against Germany. That’s not how
weapons manufacture works, Szilard.
Copy !req
1787. Oppie, you have to help.
Copy !req
1788. Fermi’s in the meeting.
Lawrence is in the meeting.
Copy !req
1789. They’re not you. You’re the
great salesman of science.
Copy !req
1790. You can convince anyone
of anything.
Copy !req
1791. Even yourself.
Copy !req
1792. Excuse me.
Copy !req
1793. The firestorm in Tokyo
killed 100,000 people.
Copy !req
1794. Mostly civilians.
Copy !req
1795. I worry about an America where we
do these things and no one protests.
Copy !req
1796. Pearl Harbor and three years
of brutal conflict in the Pacific
Copy !req
1797. bought us a lot of latitude
with the American public.
Copy !req
1798. Enough to unleash
the atomic bomb?
Copy !req
1799. The A-bomb might not cause as
much damage as the Tokyo bombings.
Copy !req
1800. What are we estimating?
Copy !req
1801. In a medium-sized city,
20,000 or 30,000 dead.
Copy !req
1802. Yes, but don’t underestimate
Copy !req
1803. the psychological impact
of an atomic explosion.
Copy !req
1804. A pillar of fire
10,000 feet tall.
Copy !req
1805. Deadly neutron effects
for a mile. In all directions.
Copy !req
1806. From one single device.
Copy !req
1807. Dropped from
a barely noticed B-29,
Copy !req
1808. the atomic bomb will be a
terrible revelation of divine power.
Copy !req
1809. If that’s true,
it would be definitive.
Copy !req
1810. World War II would be over.
Copy !req
1811. Our boys would come home.
Copy !req
1812. Military targets?
Copy !req
1813. Uh... There aren’t
any big enough.
Copy !req
1814. Perhaps a vital war plant
Copy !req
1815. with workers housed nearby?
Copy !req
1816. And we could issue a warning
to reduce civilian casualties.
Copy !req
1817. They’d send everything
they have up against us,
Copy !req
1818. and I’d be up in that plane.
Copy !req
1819. But if we announce it
and it fails to go off,
Copy !req
1820. we’d scupper any chance
of a Japanese surrender.
Copy !req
1821. Is there no way to demonstrate a
bomb to Japan to provoke surrender?
Copy !req
1822. We intend to demonstrate it
in the most unambiguous terms. Twice.
Copy !req
1823. Once, to show
the weapon’s power,
Copy !req
1824. and a second to show that we can
keep doing this until they surrender.
Copy !req
1825. We have a list of 12 cities
to choose from--
Copy !req
1826. Sorry, 11.
Copy !req
1827. I’ve taken Kyoto off the list
Copy !req
1828. due to its cultural significance
to the Japanese people.
Copy !req
1829. Also, my wife and I
honeymooned there.
Copy !req
1830. It’s a magnificent city.
Copy !req
1831. Let me make this simple
for you, gentlemen.
Copy !req
1832. According to my intelligence,
which I cannot share with you,
Copy !req
1833. the Japanese people will not
surrender, under any circumstances,
Copy !req
1834. short of a successful and total
invasion of the home islands.
Copy !req
1835. Many lives will be lost,
American and Japanese.
Copy !req
1836. The use of the atomic bomb
on Japanese cities will save lives.
Copy !req
1837. - If we retain moral advantage.
- How so?
Copy !req
1838. Well, if we use this weapon
without informing our allies,
Copy !req
1839. they’ll see it as a threat,
and we’ll be in an arms race.
Copy !req
1840. How open can we be
with the Soviets?
Copy !req
1841. Secrecy won’t stop the Soviets from
becoming part of the atomic world.
Copy !req
1842. We’ve been told
they have no uranium.
Copy !req
1843. You’ve been misinformed. A
Russian bomb is a matter of time.
Copy !req
1844. The program needs to continue
at full pace after the war.
Copy !req
1845. Secretary Stimson, if I may,
Copy !req
1846. not all scientists on the
project are in agreement.
Copy !req
1847. In fact, this might be a moment to
consider other opinions. If you talk--
Copy !req
1848. The Manhattan Project
has been plagued from the start
Copy !req
1849. by certain scientists
of doubtful discretion
Copy !req
1850. and uncertain loyalty.
Copy !req
1851. One of them just tried to meet
with the president.
Copy !req
1852. Now, we need these men,
but as soon as it’s practical,
Copy !req
1853. we should sever any such
scientists from the program.
Copy !req
1854. Wouldn’t you agree, Doctor?
Copy !req
1855. If a Russian bomb is inevitable,
Copy !req
1856. perhaps we should invite
their top scientists to Trinity?
Copy !req
1857. President Truman has no
intention of raising expectations
Copy !req
1858. that Stalin be included
in the atomic project.
Copy !req
1859. Informing him
of our breakthrough
Copy !req
1860. and presenting it
as a means to win the war
Copy !req
1861. need not make
unkeepable promises.
Copy !req
1862. But the Potsdam
peace conference in July
Copy !req
1863. will be President Truman’s last
chance to have that conversation.
Copy !req
1864. Can you give us
a working bomb by then?
Copy !req
1865. Absolutely. We will test
fire before the conference.
Copy !req
1866. Ground Zero, observation posts at
10,000 yards north, south and west.
Copy !req
1867. Where do we trigger from?
Copy !req
1868. South, 10,000.
Copy !req
1869. And Base Camp
is ten miles south here.
Copy !req
1870. And there’s a further observation
post on-- on that hill 20 miles away.
Copy !req
1871. What’s that, Frank?
Trigger lines already went in.
Copy !req
1872. The Air Force requested
a line of lights for their B-29.
Copy !req
1873. What B-29?
Our bomb’s on the tower.
Copy !req
1874. They wanna use the test to
confirm a safe operating distance.
Copy !req
1875. - That’s risky.
- Not as risky as dropping one over Japan
Copy !req
1876. and hoping that we were right
about the blast radius.
Copy !req
1877. Don’t let them slow us down.
We’re firing on the 15th.
Copy !req
1878. The 15th? That’s not--
The 15th.
Copy !req
1879. The 15th.
Copy !req
1880. So I’ll be here
at South Observation point
Copy !req
1881. with Frank and Kistiakowsky.
Copy !req
1882. You’ll all be assigned
to Base Camp, West Observation,
Copy !req
1883. or Far Observation.
Copy !req
1884. Whoa, whoa, whoa! Careful
with the knife. There, carefully.
Copy !req
1885. - Are those safe distances?
- They’re based on your calculations.
Copy !req
1886. Time to stand behind
your science, Hans. Literally.
Copy !req
1887. Yeah.
Copy !req
1888. What about the radiation cloud?
Copy !req
1889. Without high winds, it should
settle within two to three miles.
Copy !req
1890. Evacuation measures
are in place.
Copy !req
1891. But we need good weather
for visibility, so it has to be fine.
Copy !req
1892. Everybody out.
Copy !req
1893. We go on the night of the 15th.
Copy !req
1894. It’s a hard deadline, so if
anyone has anything, speak now.
Copy !req
1895. Little, little more.
Okay, stop, stop.
Copy !req
1896. Everybody, mattresses.
Put the mattress underneath.
Copy !req
1897. Could use
a final implosion test.
Copy !req
1898. - It couldn’t hurt.
- Do it.
Copy !req
1899. Is there anything else
that might stop us?
Copy !req
1900. It’s happening, isn’t it?
Copy !req
1901. I’ll send a message.
Copy !req
1902. If it’s gone our way...
Copy !req
1903. take in the sheets.
Copy !req
1904. Robert.
Copy !req
1905. Break a leg.
Copy !req
1906. Okay.
Copy !req
1907. Oppie’s taken
a very modest three kilotons.
Copy !req
1908. - Teller’s in with 45.
- Twenty.
Copy !req
1909. 20,000 tons of TNT.
Copy !req
1910. And does anyone want the side
action on atmospheric ignition?
Copy !req
1911. - Are you saying we’ll have to delay?
- I’m saying it would be prudent.
Copy !req
1912. This weather,
has it reached the site?
Copy !req
1913. Bethe is calling to tell you
the implosion test failed.
Copy !req
1914. Hello, Hans. Yes, he’s here.
Copy !req
1915. Yes.
Copy !req
1916. - Is he wrong?
- No.
Copy !req
1917. - No?
- No.
Copy !req
1918. - So we’re about to fire a dud?
- No.
Copy !req
1919. - Explain.
- Well, I can’t. I just-- I just know.
Copy !req
1920. I know the implosion lenses
will work.
Copy !req
1921. If we fire these detonators
and they don’t trigger a reaction,
Copy !req
1922. two years’ worth of plutonium will
be scattered across White Sands.
Copy !req
1923. A month of my salary
against ten bucks says it lights.
Copy !req
1924. Jesus.
Copy !req
1925. The wind’s picking up
at Zero, not the rain.
Copy !req
1926. Lightning circling.
Copy !req
1927. You think it might be time
to tell your men
Copy !req
1928. to get away from the steel tower
with the atomic bomb?
Copy !req
1929. - Let’s get to South Observation.
- Pull ’em out.
Copy !req
1930. We can make
our determination there.
Copy !req
1931. The team
hasn’t slept in two nights.
Copy !req
1932. If we stand down, make the bomb
safe, we won’t be back here for weeks.
Copy !req
1933. Then we’ll miss Potsdam. I
gotta get word to Truman by 7:00.
Copy !req
1934. Our window’s closing.
What is this doing?
Copy !req
1935. Raining, blowing, lightning.
Copy !req
1936. - For how long, damn it?
- It’s holdin’ strong.
Copy !req
1937. It’ll break before dawn.
How could you know that?
Copy !req
1938. I know this desert.
Storm cools overnight.
Copy !req
1939. Just before dawn,
the storm breaks.
Copy !req
1940. He could be right, but
schedule as late as possible.
Copy !req
1941. 5:30.
Copy !req
1942. Sign your forecast.
If you’re wrong, I’ll hang you.
Copy !req
1943. - Frank, tell them all, 5:30.
- 5:30.
Copy !req
1944. 5:30.
5:30.
Copy !req
1945. Three years,
Copy !req
1946. 4,000 people,
Copy !req
1947. two billion dollars.
Copy !req
1948. Well, if it doesn’t go off,
Copy !req
1949. we’re both finished.
Copy !req
1950. I’m betting on three kilotons.
Copy !req
1951. Anything less,
they won’t get what it is.
Copy !req
1952. What did Fermi mean
by "atmospheric ignition"?
Copy !req
1953. Well, we had a moment
where it looked like
Copy !req
1954. the chain reaction from an
atomic device might never stop.
Copy !req
1955. Setting fire to the atmosphere.
Copy !req
1956. Why is Fermi still
taking side bets on it?
Copy !req
1957. Call it gallows humor.
Copy !req
1958. Wait, are we saying there’s a
chance that when we push that button,
Copy !req
1959. we destroy the world?
Copy !req
1960. Nothing in our research over
three years supports that conclusion.
Copy !req
1961. Except as
the most remote possibility.
Copy !req
1962. - How remote?
- Chances are near zero.
Copy !req
1963. Near zero.
Copy !req
1964. What do you want
from theory alone?
Copy !req
1965. Zero would be nice.
Copy !req
1966. In exactly one hour,
58 minutes, we’ll know.
Copy !req
1967. It’s letting up.
Copy !req
1968. The arming party’s left Zero,
they’re heading this way.
Copy !req
1969. Throwing the switches.
Copy !req
1970. Turn the cars.
Ready for emergency evacuation.
Copy !req
1971. Take your welder’s glass.
Copy !req
1972. Everybody, take your places.
Copy !req
1973. Everybody take a welder’s glass!
Copy !req
1974. Everybody take a welder’s glass.
Copy !req
1975. Twenty minutes.
Copy !req
1976. Twenty minutes.
Copy !req
1977. That’s 20.
Copy !req
1978. On the leg, please.
Copy !req
1979. Feynman.
No.
Copy !req
1980. For your eyes, sir.
The glass stops the UV.
Copy !req
1981. And what stops the glass?
Copy !req
1982. I’m gonna head to Base Camp.
Best of luck.
Copy !req
1983. Robert,
Copy !req
1984. try not to blow up the world.
Copy !req
1985. Watch that needle.
Copy !req
1986. If the detonators don’t charge,
Copy !req
1987. or the voltage drops
below one volt,
Copy !req
1988. you hit that button, you abort.
Copy !req
1989. Understood?
Copy !req
1990. Understood.
Copy !req
1991. Two minutes to detonation.
Copy !req
1992. Everybody down.
Copy !req
1993. Do not turn around until you
see light reflected on the hills.
Copy !req
1994. Then look at the explosion
only through your welder’s glass.
Copy !req
1995. Ninety seconds to detonation.
Copy !req
1996. Eighty seconds to detonation.
Copy !req
1997. Is it rubbed in?
Copy !req
1998. Yeah.
Copy !req
1999. Sixty seconds to detonation.
Copy !req
2000. These things
are hard on your heart.
Copy !req
2001. Thirty seconds.
Copy !req
2002. Detonator’s charged.
Copy !req
2003. 17, 16, 15...
Copy !req
2004. 14, 13, 12, 11...
Copy !req
2005. Ten...
Copy !req
2006. ...nine,
Copy !req
2007. eight...
Copy !req
2008. seven...
Copy !req
2009. six...
Copy !req
2010. five...
Copy !req
2011. four...
Copy !req
2012. three...
Copy !req
2013. two...
Copy !req
2014. one.
Copy !req
2015. "And now I am become Death."
Copy !req
2016. "The destroyer of worlds."
Copy !req
2017. It worked.
Copy !req
2018. You owe me ten dollars!
Oh!
Copy !req
2019. Come on!
Copy !req
2020. I-- I’m good for it, Kisty.
Copy !req
2021. You are.
Copy !req
2022. Yes, you are!
Copy !req
2023. We did it! Well done.
Copy !req
2024. Get me Potsdam right away.
Copy !req
2025. - Get a message to Kitty.
- We can’t say anything.
Copy !req
2026. Tell her to take in the sheets.
Copy !req
2027. Shh.
Copy !req
2028. - Hello?
- Hi. Kitty?
Copy !req
2029. What-- What? Charlotte.
Charlotte, go ahead, go ahead.
Copy !req
2030. Oh, um, well, I don’t know, he just
said to tell you to "bring in the sheets."
Copy !req
2031. Kitty?
Copy !req
2032. Kitty? Kitty,
are you still there?
Copy !req
2033. If they detonate it too high in the
air, the blast won’t be as powerful.
Copy !req
2034. With respect, Dr. Oppenheimer,
Copy !req
2035. we’ll take it from here.
Copy !req
2036. Did Truman brief Stalin
at Potsdam?
Copy !req
2037. A brief would be
an overstatement.
Copy !req
2038. He referred to
a powerful new weapon.
Copy !req
2039. Stalin hoped we’d use it
against Japan.
Copy !req
2040. That’s it?
Copy !req
2041. Robert, we’ve given them an ace,
Copy !req
2042. it’s for them to play the hand.
Copy !req
2043. You’re aiming for the 6th?
Copy !req
2044. Well, it’s up to the CO
in the Pacific.
Copy !req
2045. Should I come with you
to Washington?
Copy !req
2046. What for?
Copy !req
2047. Well, you’ll keep me informed.
Copy !req
2048. Of course.
Copy !req
2049. As best I can.
Copy !req
2050. Would the Japanese surrender
if they knew what was coming?
Copy !req
2051. I don’t know.
Copy !req
2052. Have you seen
Szilard’s petition?
Copy !req
2053. What the hell does Szilard
know about the Japanese?
Copy !req
2054. You’re not signing it, are you?
Copy !req
2055. Many people have.
A lot of people have.
Copy !req
2056. Edward,
Copy !req
2057. the fact that we built this bomb
Copy !req
2058. does not give us any more
right or responsibility
Copy !req
2059. to decide how it’s used
than anyone else.
Copy !req
2060. But we’re the only people
who know about it.
Copy !req
2061. I’ve told Stimson the various
opinions of the community.
Copy !req
2062. But what’s your opinion?
Copy !req
2063. Once it’s used...
Copy !req
2064. nuclear war, perhaps all war...
Copy !req
2065. becomes unthinkable.
Copy !req
2066. Until somebody builds
a bigger bomb.
Copy !req
2067. I thought they would call.
Copy !req
2068. It’s only the 5th.
Copy !req
2069. In Japan, it’s the 6th.
Copy !req
2070. Charlotte.
Copy !req
2071. Try Groves.
Copy !req
2072. Anything?
Copy !req
2073. Charlotte?
Copy !req
2074. Truman’s on the radio.
Copy !req
2075. Sixteen hours ago,
Copy !req
2076. an American airplane dropped
one bomb on Hiroshima...
Copy !req
2077. ...and destroyed
its usefulness to the enemy.
Copy !req
2078. The bomb had more power
than 20,000 tons of TNT.
Copy !req
2079. It is an atomic bomb.
Copy !req
2080. It is a harnessing of the
basic power of the universe.
Copy !req
2081. Groves on one.
Copy !req
2082. We are now prepared to destroy,
Copy !req
2083. more rapidly and completely,
the Japanese--
Copy !req
2084. General?
Copy !req
2085. I’m very proud of you
and all of your people.
Copy !req
2086. It went all right?
Copy !req
2087. Apparently, it went
with a tremendous bang.
Copy !req
2088. Well, everyone here is feeling
reasonably good about it.
Copy !req
2089. It’s been a long road.
Copy !req
2090. I think one of the
wisest things I ever did
Copy !req
2091. was when I selected
the director of Los Alamos.
Copy !req
2092. We have spent
more than two billion dollars
Copy !req
2093. on the greatest scientific
gamble in history,
Copy !req
2094. and we have won.
Copy !req
2095. Oppie! Oppie!
Oppie! Oppie!
Copy !req
2096. Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie!
Copy !req
2097. The world...
Copy !req
2098. will remember this day.
Copy !req
2099. It’s too soon to--
Copy !req
2100. It’s too soon to determine what
the results of the bombing are.
Copy !req
2101. But I’ll bet
the Japanese didn’t like it.
Copy !req
2102. I’m so proud.
Copy !req
2103. So proud of
what you have accomplished.
Copy !req
2104. I just wish we had it in time
to use against the Germans.
Copy !req
2105. Dr. Oppenheimer?
Copy !req
2106. Dr. Oppenheimer?
Copy !req
2107. Nice picture.
Copy !req
2108. President Truman
will see you now.
Copy !req
2109. Dr. Oppenheimer.
It’s an honor.
Copy !req
2110. Mr. President. Please.
Copy !req
2111. Thank you.
Copy !req
2112. Secretary Byrnes.
Copy !req
2113. How’s it feel to be the most
famous man in the world?
Copy !req
2114. You helped save
a lot of American lives.
Copy !req
2115. What we did at Hiroshima
was a-- And Nagasaki.
Copy !req
2116. Well, obviously.
Copy !req
2117. Your invention
let us bring our boys home.
Copy !req
2118. Well, it was hardly...
Copy !req
2119. my invention.
Copy !req
2120. It was you on the cover of Time.
Copy !req
2121. Jim tells me you’re concerned
about an arms race with the Soviets.
Copy !req
2122. Oh, yes, uh...
Copy !req
2123. Well, um...
Copy !req
2124. It’s that, uh,
Copy !req
2125. now is our chance to secure...
Copy !req
2126. international cooperation on...
...atomic energy
Copy !req
2127. a-a-and I’m concerned--
Copy !req
2128. Do you know when the Soviets
are gonna have the bomb?
Copy !req
2129. I don’t think
I could give a precise--
Copy !req
2130. Never.
Copy !req
2131. Never.
Copy !req
2132. Mr. President, the Russians
have good physicists
Copy !req
2133. a-a-and abundant resources.
Abundant?
Copy !req
2134. Yes.
Copy !req
2135. I don’t think so.
Copy !req
2136. Well, they’ll put everything
they have in...
Copy !req
2137. I hear you’re leaving
Los Alamos.
Copy !req
2138. What should we do with it?
Copy !req
2139. Give it back to the Indians.
Copy !req
2140. Um, Dr. Oppenheimer,
Copy !req
2141. if what you say
about the Soviets is true,
Copy !req
2142. we have to build up Los Alamos,
not shut it down.
Copy !req
2143. Mr. President...
Copy !req
2144. Um...
Copy !req
2145. I feel that I have
blood on my hands.
Copy !req
2146. You think anyone
in Hiroshima or Nagasaki
Copy !req
2147. gives a shit who built the bomb?
Copy !req
2148. They care who dropped it.
Copy !req
2149. I did.
Copy !req
2150. Hiroshima isn’t about you.
Copy !req
2151. Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2152. Don’t let that crybaby
back in here.
Copy !req
2153. Robert saw that
hand-wringing got him nowhere.
Copy !req
2154. By the time I met him,
he’d fully embraced
Copy !req
2155. his "father of the bomb"
reputation.
Copy !req
2156. And he used his profile
to influence policy.
Copy !req
2157. Doctor, in the years
following the war,
Copy !req
2158. would you say that
you exerted a great influence
Copy !req
2159. on the atomic policies
of the USA?
Copy !req
2160. I think "great" would be
an overstatement.
Copy !req
2161. Really?
If we look at the issue of isotopes,
Copy !req
2162. were you not personally responsible for
destroying all opposition to their export?
Copy !req
2163. You could use
a bottle of beer...
Copy !req
2164. ...when making atomic weapons.
Copy !req
2165. In fact, you do.
Copy !req
2166. I was the spokesman,
Copy !req
2167. but the opinion among scientists
was unanimous.
Copy !req
2168. All along with McCarthy on the
rise, he knew he was vulnerable.
Copy !req
2169. His brother was blacklisted
Copy !req
2170. by every university
in the country.
Copy !req
2171. Lomanitz wound up working
the railroad, laying track.
Copy !req
2172. And Chevalier went into exile.
Copy !req
2173. But none of that stopped Robert
from pushing the GAC
Copy !req
2174. to recommend arms control
instead of the H-bomb.
Copy !req
2175. He was devastated when Truman
rejected their recommendation.
Copy !req
2176. I miss Richard
more than I can bear.
Copy !req
2177. I know, Ruth, I know.
Copy !req
2178. Part of me’s glad he didn’t
live to see where this is all going.
Copy !req
2179. Here comes the birthday boy.
To gloat.
Copy !req
2180. Have fun.
Copy !req
2181. Robert, uh,
my son and his fiancée
Copy !req
2182. are desperate to meet the father
of the atomic bomb, and so...
Copy !req
2183. Well... good day.
Copy !req
2184. Is this a bad time?
Copy !req
2185. What do you think, Lewis?
Copy !req
2186. Well, I think it must
have been a blow for you.
Copy !req
2187. For the world.
Copy !req
2188. The world? What does Fuchs
mean to the rest of the world?
Copy !req
2189. Fuchs?
Copy !req
2190. Klaus Fuchs?
Copy !req
2191. Oh, dear. You haven’t heard.
Copy !req
2192. Klaus Fuchs,
the British scientist
Copy !req
2193. that you put onto the
implosion team at Los Alamos,
Copy !req
2194. turns out he was spying for
the Soviets the whole time.
Copy !req
2195. I’m sorry.
Copy !req
2196. After the truth
about Fuchs came out,
Copy !req
2197. the FBI stepped up
surveillance on him.
Copy !req
2198. He knew his phone was tapped,
Copy !req
2199. he was followed everywhere,
Copy !req
2200. his trash picked through.
Copy !req
2201. - But never stopped speaking his mind.
- A man of conviction.
Copy !req
2202. And maybe he thought fame
could actually protect him.
Copy !req
2203. When Eisenhower took office,
he saw one more chance.
Copy !req
2204. He took it.
Copy !req
2205. America and Russia may be
likened to two scorpions in a bottle,
Copy !req
2206. each capable
of killing the other,
Copy !req
2207. but only at the risk
of his own life.
Copy !req
2208. Now, there are various aspects
of this policy--
Copy !req
2209. Lot of scientists blame me,
Copy !req
2210. but how was I supposed
to protect him?
Copy !req
2211. ...are too secret for discussion,
candor is the only remedy.
Copy !req
2212. Officials in Washington need to
start leveling with the American people.
Copy !req
2213. That was the last straw
for Robert’s enemies.
Copy !req
2214. So he had to lose
his security clearance?
Copy !req
2215. And with it, his credibility.
Copy !req
2216. But how could they do it?
Copy !req
2217. He was a war hero. He’d already
told everyone about his past.
Copy !req
2218. Borden dredged it all up.
Copy !req
2219. How could Borden get access
to Oppenheimer’s FBI file?
Copy !req
2220. Could it have been Nichols?
No, I can’t imagine he’d do that.
Copy !req
2221. But whoever did
unleashed a firestorm
Copy !req
2222. that burned a path from the White
House back to my desk at the AEC.
Copy !req
2223. You see him in there, right?
Copy !req
2224. I’ve worked
my whole life to get here,
Copy !req
2225. Cabinet of
the United States of America,
Copy !req
2226. and now, in front of the entire country,
they’re gonna put me back in my place.
Copy !req
2227. A lowly shoe salesman.
Copy !req
2228. Lewis, we can win this thing.
Copy !req
2229. I-I think we can get the Senate
to grasp that you did your duty,
Copy !req
2230. painful though it was.
Copy !req
2231. Now, will Hill’s testimony
back us up? Hill will be fine.
Copy !req
2232. I don’t really know him, but he
was one of Szilard’s boys in Chicago,
Copy !req
2233. and they never forgave Robert
Copy !req
2234. for not supporting the petition
against bombing Japan.
Copy !req
2235. This was taken
31 days after the bombing.
Copy !req
2236. Virtually everyone in the
street for nearly a mile around
Copy !req
2237. was instantly
and seriously burned.
Copy !req
2238. The Japanese spoke of people
who wore striped clothing
Copy !req
2239. upon whom the skin
was burned in stripes.
Copy !req
2240. There were many
who thought themselves lucky,
Copy !req
2241. who climbed out of the ruins of
their homes, only slightly injured.
Copy !req
2242. But they died anyway.
Copy !req
2243. They died days or weeks later
from the radium-like rays
Copy !req
2244. emitted in great numbers
at the moment of the explosion.
Copy !req
2245. Did you read
this crap in the papers?
Copy !req
2246. A British physicist is saying
Copy !req
2247. the atomic bombings were
not the last act of World War II,
Copy !req
2248. but the first act
of this cold war with Russia.
Copy !req
2249. Which physicist?
Copy !req
2250. I think you knew him.
Patrick Blackett.
Copy !req
2251. He may not be wrong.
Copy !req
2252. Stimson is now telling me
Copy !req
2253. we bombed an enemy
that was essentially defeated.
Copy !req
2254. Robert, you’ve
all the influence now.
Copy !req
2255. Please.
Copy !req
2256. Urge them to continue
my research on the Super.
Copy !req
2257. I neither can nor will, Edward.
Copy !req
2258. Why not?
Copy !req
2259. It’s not the right use
of our resources.
Copy !req
2260. Is that what you really believe?
Copy !req
2261. J. Robert Oppenheimer.
Sphinx-like guru of the atom.
Copy !req
2262. Nobody knows what you believe.
Copy !req
2263. Do you? Hmm?
Copy !req
2264. One final time,
our program director,
Copy !req
2265. Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2266. I hope that, in years to come,
Copy !req
2267. you will look back on your work
here with pride.
Copy !req
2268. But today that pride must be
tempered with a profound concern.
Copy !req
2269. If atomic weapons are to be added
to the arsenals of a warring world,
Copy !req
2270. then the day will come when people
will curse the name of Los Alamos.
Copy !req
2271. Sorry, Admiral.
Stopped off to get this.
Copy !req
2272. It seems pretty favorable.
Copy !req
2273. There’s Oppenheimer.
What’s the caption?
Copy !req
2274. Uh, "J. Robert Oppenheimer,
Strauss fought...
Copy !req
2275. and the US won."
Copy !req
2276. That’ll work.
Copy !req
2277. Those were your words
from the other day.
Copy !req
2278. We needed to pivot.
Copy !req
2279. But how would you know what
Time magazine’s gonna write?
Copy !req
2280. Henry Luce is a friend.
Copy !req
2281. You sat here and let
me tell you how it’s done,
Copy !req
2282. but you’ve been far ahead
all along.
Copy !req
2283. Survival in Washington
Copy !req
2284. is about knowing
how to get things done.
Copy !req
2285. Right.
Copy !req
2286. What was it you said
about Borden?
Copy !req
2287. "Why get caught
holding the knife yourself?"
Copy !req
2288. I’m beginning to think Borden
was holding the knife for you.
Copy !req
2289. It’s gonna come down to how much influence
Borden’s been able to exert on Teller.
Copy !req
2290. Did I say something funny?
Copy !req
2291. Just "Borden, Borden, Borden"
when we all know that it’s Strauss.
Copy !req
2292. Lewis brought me
to Princeton, Kitty.
Copy !req
2293. And then you humiliated him
in front of Congress.
Copy !req
2294. But more useful than a sandwich.
Copy !req
2295. How’d I do?
Copy !req
2296. Maybe a little too well, Robert.
Copy !req
2297. That was six years ago.
Copy !req
2298. You know the truly vindictive,
patient as saints.
Copy !req
2299. Strauss has been perfectly clear
that he is neutral.
Copy !req
2300. Wake up! It is Strauss!
Copy !req
2301. It’s always been Strauss,
and you know it.
Copy !req
2302. Why won’t you fight him?
Copy !req
2303. Christ’s sake.
Copy !req
2304. It wasn’t Nichols, or Hoover,
or one of Truman’s guys.
Copy !req
2305. It was you.
You gave the file to Borden.
Copy !req
2306. You set him on Oppenheimer.
You convinced him to--
Copy !req
2307. Borden didn’t take
any convincing.
Copy !req
2308. Take your time,
use the entire file.
Copy !req
2309. Write up your conclusions,
send them to the FBI.
Copy !req
2310. The material is obviously extensive,
but there’s nothing new here.
Copy !req
2311. Your conclusions will be.
Copy !req
2312. And they’ll have to be answered.
Copy !req
2313. Hoover passes them to McCarthy?
Copy !req
2314. Oppenheimer’s too slippery
for that self-promoting clown.
Copy !req
2315. I’ve talked it over with Hoover,
he’ll hold McCarthy at bay
Copy !req
2316. while you do this with the AEC.
Copy !req
2317. A trial.
Copy !req
2318. No. No trial.
Copy !req
2319. You can’t give Oppenheimer
a platform.
Copy !req
2320. You can’t martyr him.
Copy !req
2321. We need a systematic destruction
of Oppenheimer’s credibility
Copy !req
2322. so he can never again speak
on matters of national security.
Copy !req
2323. Then what?
Copy !req
2324. A shabby little room,
far from the limelight.
Copy !req
2325. A simple,
bureaucratic procedure.
Copy !req
2326. His Q clearance
is up for renewal.
Copy !req
2327. You send your accusations
to the FBI...
Copy !req
2328. Hoover sends them to the AEC,
you’re forced to act.
Copy !req
2329. You write up an indictment.
Copy !req
2330. You tell Oppenheimer his security
clearance is not being renewed.
Copy !req
2331. But offer him
the chance to appeal.
Copy !req
2332. As you can see, Robert,
it’s not yet signed.
Copy !req
2333. May I keep this?
No.
Copy !req
2334. If you do decide to appeal,
they’ll have to send you a copy.
Copy !req
2335. When he appeals,
and trust me, he will,
Copy !req
2336. I appoint a board.
Copy !req
2337. They will, of course,
have counsel.
Copy !req
2338. - Prosecutor?
- In all but name.
Copy !req
2339. Who?
Roger Robb.
Copy !req
2340. Ouch.
Copy !req
2341. Robb will have security clearance
to examine Oppenheimer’s file.
Copy !req
2342. As will the Gray board.
Copy !req
2343. Defense counsel will not.
Copy !req
2344. A closed hearing.
Copy !req
2345. "The so-called and derogatory
information in your indictment of me..."
Copy !req
2346. No audience. No reporters.
No burden of proof.
Copy !req
2347. No burden of proof?
Copy !req
2348. We’re not convicting.
Copy !req
2349. We’re just denying.
Copy !req
2350. What is it you said?
Copy !req
2351. "This is just how
the game is played."
Copy !req
2352. Well, forgive my naivete.
Copy !req
2353. Amateurs seek the sun...
get eaten.
Copy !req
2354. Power stays in the shadows.
Copy !req
2355. But, sir, you’re out
of the shadows now.
Copy !req
2356. Yeah, that’s why
this has to work.
Copy !req
2357. Well...
Copy !req
2358. Teller’s testifying
this morning. That’ll help.
Copy !req
2359. And then...
Copy !req
2360. Hill is in the afternoon.
Copy !req
2361. Hill is gonna help us too.
Copy !req
2362. As you can see,
Robert, it’s not yet signed.
Copy !req
2363. - May I keep this?
- No.
Copy !req
2364. If you do decide to appeal, then
they’ll have to send you a copy.
Copy !req
2365. Take my car and driver.
I insist.
Copy !req
2366. I’ll have to
consult my lawyers, Lewis.
Copy !req
2367. Of course.
But don’t take too long.
Copy !req
2368. I can’t keep Nichols at bay.
Copy !req
2369. I’m sorry it’s come
to this, Robert.
Copy !req
2370. I think it’s wrong.
Copy !req
2371. Nichols wants me to fight so
he can get it all on the record.
Copy !req
2372. Strauss wants me to walk away.
Copy !req
2373. Strauss knows that you can’t do
that. You’d be accepting the charges.
Copy !req
2374. You’ll lose your job.
Copy !req
2375. You will lose your reputation.
We’ll lose our house.
Copy !req
2376. Robert, we have to fight.
Copy !req
2377. As AEC counsel, I can’t represent
you. I’ll call Lloyd Garrison.
Copy !req
2378. - He’s good.
- The best, but...
Copy !req
2379. I have to warn you,
Copy !req
2380. this won’t be a fair fight.
Copy !req
2381. During your interview
with Boris Pash in 1943,
Copy !req
2382. did you refer to microfilm?
Copy !req
2383. - No.
- Tab 11, page one, paragraph three.
Copy !req
2384. You never said, "Man of the
consulate expert in the use of microfilm."
Copy !req
2385. - I’m sorry.
- No.
Copy !req
2386. I would like to know what
document Mr. Robb is quoting from
Copy !req
2387. and if we might
be furnished with a copy.
Copy !req
2388. The document is classified,
Mr. Garrison.
Copy !req
2389. I think we should get back
to firsthand information.
Copy !req
2390. - This is firsthand.
- How so, Roger?
Copy !req
2391. There was a recording
of the interview.
Copy !req
2392. You let my client sit here
and potentially perjure himself
Copy !req
2393. and all this time,
you had a recording?
Copy !req
2394. Nobody told your client to
misrepresent his former answers.
Copy !req
2395. Misrepres-- It was 12 years ago.
Copy !req
2396. Can we hear this recording?
Copy !req
2397. You don’t have the clearance,
Mr. Garrison.
Copy !req
2398. - But you’re reading it into the record.
- Please, please.
Copy !req
2399. Is this proceeding interested
in entrapment or in truth?
Copy !req
2400. If it’s truth, where’s the
disclosure? Where’s the witness list?
Copy !req
2401. Mr. Garrison, this isn’t a
trial, as you’re well aware.
Copy !req
2402. Evidentiary rules do not apply.
We are dealing with national security.
Copy !req
2403. Yes, sir, with all due respect,
Copy !req
2404. I fail to see how national
security prevents the prosecution
Copy !req
2405. from providing us
a list of witnesses.
Copy !req
2406. Perhaps we are in need
of a brief recess.
Copy !req
2407. Gentlemen, you have my words.
Copy !req
2408. If you say they’re from a
transcript, then I’ll accept it.
Copy !req
2409. I’ve already explained
I made up a cock-and-bull story.
Copy !req
2410. But why would anyone
make up such an elaborate story?
Copy !req
2411. Because I was an idiot.
Copy !req
2412. Why lie?
Copy !req
2413. Well, clearly with the intention of not
revealing who the intermediary was.
Copy !req
2414. Your friend, Haakon Chevalier,
the communist?
Copy !req
2415. Is he still your friend?
Copy !req
2416. Yes.
Copy !req
2417. Dr. Rabi,
thank you for coming.
Copy !req
2418. Do you know who else
the prosecution has called?
Copy !req
2419. Teller, obviously.
Copy !req
2420. - They’ve asked Lawrence.
- What did he say?
Copy !req
2421. - He wasn’t going to help them, but...
- But?
Copy !req
2422. Strauss told him that you and Ruth Tolman
have been having an affair for years.
Copy !req
2423. The whole time
you lived with them in Pasadena.
Copy !req
2424. He convinced Lawrence that
Richard died of a broken heart.
Copy !req
2425. - That’s absurd.
- What part?
Copy !req
2426. The broken heart.
Copy !req
2427. Richard never found out.
Copy !req
2428. Is Lawrence gonna testify?
Copy !req
2429. I don’t know.
Copy !req
2430. Dr. Rabi, what governmental
positions do you currently hold?
Copy !req
2431. I am the chairman of the General
Advisory Committee to the AEC,
Copy !req
2432. succeeding Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2433. And how long have you known
Dr. Oppenheimer?
Copy !req
2434. Since 1928. I...
Copy !req
2435. I know him quite well.
Copy !req
2436. Well enough to speak to the
bearing of his loyalty and character?
Copy !req
2437. Dr. Oppenheimer is a man
of upstanding character.
Copy !req
2438. And he is loyal to the
United States, to his friends,
Copy !req
2439. to the institutions
of which he is part.
Copy !req
2440. Eat.
Copy !req
2441. - What was that?
- Nothing to worry about.
Copy !req
2442. After the Russian A-bomb test,
Copy !req
2443. did Dr. Lawrence come to see you
about the hydrogen bomb?
Copy !req
2444. You’d be better off asking him.
Copy !req
2445. Well, I fully intend to.
Copy !req
2446. Would you say that Dr. Oppenheimer
was unalterably opposed to the H-bomb?
Copy !req
2447. No, he thought
that a fusion program
Copy !req
2448. would come at the expense of
our awfully good fission program.
Copy !req
2449. But that proved
not to be the case.
Copy !req
2450. In the event,
both could be done.
Copy !req
2451. Suppose that this board
did not feel satisfied that,
Copy !req
2452. in his testimony here,
Dr. Oppenheimer had been wholly truthful.
Copy !req
2453. What would you say whether
or not he should be cleared?
Copy !req
2454. Why go through all this
against a man
Copy !req
2455. who has accomplished
what Dr. Oppenheimer has?
Copy !req
2456. Look at his record.
Copy !req
2457. We have an A-bomb
and a whole series of it.
Copy !req
2458. We have a whole series
of Super bombs.
Copy !req
2459. What more do you want?
Mermaids?
Copy !req
2460. But I’ve known Secretary
Strauss for many years,
Copy !req
2461. and I feel it a necessity
to express the warm support
Copy !req
2462. for science and scientists
Lewis has shown.
Copy !req
2463. We’ll break now, unless
there’s any immediate business.
Copy !req
2464. Senator, I’d like to
once again request
Copy !req
2465. that we’re furnished
with a list of witnesses.
Copy !req
2466. And I will remind the nominee
Copy !req
2467. that we don’t always have
that information in advance.
Copy !req
2468. We do know that Dr. Hill
will be here after lunch.
Copy !req
2469. Mr. Chairman, our next
scheduled witness, Dr. Lawrence,
Copy !req
2470. has apparently
come down with colitis.
Copy !req
2471. So we’ll proceed
with William Borden instead.
Copy !req
2472. Mr. Borden, welcome.
Please take a seat.
Copy !req
2473. Mr. Borden, during your
investigation into Dr. Oppenheimer,
Copy !req
2474. - did you reach certain conclusions?
- I did.
Copy !req
2475. And did there come a time when
you expressed those conclusions
Copy !req
2476. in a letter to Mr. J. Edgar Hoover of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation?
Copy !req
2477. - That is correct.
- Prior to the writing of the letter,
Copy !req
2478. did you discuss the writing of
the letter with anybody attached
Copy !req
2479. to the Atomic Energy Commission?
Copy !req
2480. - I did not.
- Do you have a copy of the letter?
Copy !req
2481. I have one in front of me.
Copy !req
2482. Would you please be so kind
as to read it, sir?
Copy !req
2483. "Dear Mr. Hoover, the
purpose of this letter is to state--"
Copy !req
2484. I’m sorry, I’m sorry,
if I could have a--
Copy !req
2485. What is the purpose of the delay?
He’s simply gonna read the letter.
Copy !req
2486. Mr. Chairman, this is the
first I’ve seen of this letter,
Copy !req
2487. and I see statements here,
at least one,
Copy !req
2488. of a kind that I don’t think anyone
would like to see go into the record.
Copy !req
2489. These are accusations that
have not previously been made.
Copy !req
2490. That are not part of
the indictment from Nichols.
Copy !req
2491. Accusations of a kind
that I don’t think belong here.
Copy !req
2492. The witness wrote this letter
on his own initiative,
Copy !req
2493. laying out evidence that has
already been before the board.
Copy !req
2494. His conclusions
are valid testimony,
Copy !req
2495. just like the positive conclusions
of friends of Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2496. It cuts both ways.
Copy !req
2497. How long has counsel been
in possession of this letter?
Copy !req
2498. I don’t think I should be subject to
cross-examination by you, Mr. Garrison.
Copy !req
2499. Mr. Garrison, given that we on
the board have all read the letter,
Copy !req
2500. wouldn’t it be better
to have it in the record?
Copy !req
2501. Let’s proceed.
Copy !req
2502. "Dear Mr. Hoover,
Copy !req
2503. the purpose of this letter
is to state my opinion
Copy !req
2504. based upon years of study of
the available classified evidence,
Copy !req
2505. that more probably than not
Copy !req
2506. J. Robert Oppenheimer
is an agent of the Soviet Union.
Copy !req
2507. The following conclusions
are justified.
Copy !req
2508. One, between 1929 and 1942,
more probably than not,
Copy !req
2509. J. Robert Oppenheimer was a
sufficiently hardened communist,
Copy !req
2510. that he volunteered information
to the Soviets.
Copy !req
2511. Two, more probably than not,
Copy !req
2512. he has since been functioning
as an espionage agent.
Copy !req
2513. Three, more probably than not,
Copy !req
2514. he has since acted
under a Soviet directive
Copy !req
2515. in influencing United States
military policy..."
Copy !req
2516. - I’m sorry, Robert.
- ..."atomic energy, intelligence..."
Copy !req
2517. Is anyone ever going to tell the
truth about what’s happening here?
Copy !req
2518. We will now hear
from Dr. David Hill.
Copy !req
2519. Dr. Hill, would you care
to make a statement?
Copy !req
2520. Thank you.
Copy !req
2521. I’ve been asked to testify
about Lewis Strauss.
Copy !req
2522. A man who has given years of
service in high positions of government
Copy !req
2523. and who is known to be earnest,
hardworking and intelligent.
Copy !req
2524. The views I have to express
are my own,
Copy !req
2525. but I believe that much I
have to say will help to indicate
Copy !req
2526. why most of the scientists
in this country
Copy !req
2527. would prefer to see Mr. Strauss
completely out of government.
Copy !req
2528. You’re referring to the
hostility of certain scientists
Copy !req
2529. directed toward Mr. Strauss
because of his commitment to security,
Copy !req
2530. as demonstrated
in the Oppenheimer affair?
Copy !req
2531. No.
Copy !req
2532. Because of the personal vindictiveness
he demonstrated against Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2533. Order.
Copy !req
2534. Order.
Copy !req
2535. It appears to most scientists
around this country
Copy !req
2536. that Robert Oppenheimer
is now being pilloried
Copy !req
2537. and put through an ordeal because
he expressed his honest opinions.
Copy !req
2538. Dr. Bush, I thought I was
performing a service to my country
Copy !req
2539. when hearing this case.
Copy !req
2540. No board in this country
should sit in judgment of a man
Copy !req
2541. because he expressed
strong opinions.
Copy !req
2542. If you wanna try that case,
you should try me.
Copy !req
2543. Excuse me, gentlemen,
if I become stirred.
Copy !req
2544. But I am.
Copy !req
2545. Dr. Hill, we’ve already heard that
Mr. Strauss did not bring the charges,
Copy !req
2546. or participate in the hearings
against Dr. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2547. The Oppenheimer matter
was initiated and carried through
Copy !req
2548. largely through the animus
of Lewis Strauss.
Copy !req
2549. Oppenheimer made mincemeat
out of Strauss’s position
Copy !req
2550. on the shipment of isotopes
to Norway,
Copy !req
2551. and Strauss never forgave him
this public humiliation.
Copy !req
2552. Another controversy between them centered
around their differences in judgment
Copy !req
2553. on how the H-bomb would
contribute to national security.
Copy !req
2554. Strauss turned
to the personnel security system
Copy !req
2555. in order to destroy
Oppenheimer’s effectiveness.
Copy !req
2556. And Strauss was able
to find a few ambitious men
Copy !req
2557. who also disagreed
with Oppenheimer’s positions
Copy !req
2558. and envied him his prestige
in government circles.
Copy !req
2559. I’ve always assumed, and still assume,
that he’s loyal to the United States.
Copy !req
2560. I believe this.
Copy !req
2561. And I shall believe it until I see
very conclusive proof to the opposite.
Copy !req
2562. Do you, or do you not, believe that
Dr. Oppenheimer is a security risk?
Copy !req
2563. In a great number of cases,
Copy !req
2564. I have seen Dr. Oppenheimer
act in a way which was, to me,
Copy !req
2565. exceedingly hard to understand.
Copy !req
2566. I thoroughly disagreed with him
in numerous issues,
Copy !req
2567. and his actions, frankly, appeared
to me confused and complicated.
Copy !req
2568. To this extent, I feel,
Copy !req
2569. I want to see the vital
interests of this country
Copy !req
2570. in hands
which I understand better,
Copy !req
2571. and therefore trust more.
Copy !req
2572. - Thank you, Doctor.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
2573. I’m sorry.
Copy !req
2574. You shook his fucking hand?
Copy !req
2575. Oh, I would have
spit in his face.
Copy !req
2576. Not sure the board
would have appreciated that.
Copy !req
2577. Is it not gentlemanly enough
for you?
Copy !req
2578. I think you’re all being
too goddamn gentlemanly.
Copy !req
2579. Gray must see
what Robb is doing.
Copy !req
2580. Why doesn’t he just
shut him down?
Copy !req
2581. And you shaking Teller’s hand.
Copy !req
2582. You need to stop
playing the martyr.
Copy !req
2583. Under the current AEC guidelines,
would you clear Dr. Oppenheimer today?
Copy !req
2584. Under my interpretation
of the Atomic Energy Act,
Copy !req
2585. which did not exist when I
hired Dr. Oppenheimer in 1942,
Copy !req
2586. I would not clear him today
if I were on the commission.
Copy !req
2587. Good, thank you,
General, that is all.
Copy !req
2588. But I don’t think
I’d clear any of those guys.
Copy !req
2589. That’s all.
Copy !req
2590. Dr. Oppenheimer
had no responsibility
Copy !req
2591. in the selection or the
clearance of Klaus Fuchs, did he?
Copy !req
2592. No. None at all.
Copy !req
2593. And you wouldn’t want to
leave this board
Copy !req
2594. with any suggestion today
Copy !req
2595. that you’re here questioning his
basic loyalty to the United States
Copy !req
2596. and the operation of Los Alamos.
Copy !req
2597. By no means.
Copy !req
2598. I hope I didn’t lead anyone to
believe otherwise for an instant.
Copy !req
2599. Thank you, General.
Copy !req
2600. Okay. We shouldn’t
keep them waiting.
Copy !req
2601. She’ll be here.
Copy !req
2602. Do you even want her here?
Copy !req
2603. Only a fool or an adolescent
Copy !req
2604. presumes to know
someone else’s relationship,
Copy !req
2605. and you’re neither, Lloyd.
Copy !req
2606. Kitty and I, we’re grown-ups.
Copy !req
2607. We’ve walked through fire together.
Copy !req
2608. She’ll do fine.
Copy !req
2609. Would you describe your views
on communism as pro, anti, neutral?
Copy !req
2610. Very strongly against.
Copy !req
2611. I’ve had nothing to do with
communism since 1936, since...
Copy !req
2612. since before I met Robert.
Copy !req
2613. That’s all.
Copy !req
2614. The record demonstrates
that Oppenheimer
Copy !req
2615. was not interrogated by
impartial and disinterested counsel
Copy !req
2616. for the Gray board.
Copy !req
2617. He was interrogated
by a prosecutor
Copy !req
2618. who used all the tricks of a
rather ingenious legal background.
Copy !req
2619. You are charging now that the
Gray board permitted a prosecution.
Copy !req
2620. If I were on the Gray board,
Copy !req
2621. I would have protested against the
tactics of the man who served, in fact,
Copy !req
2622. as the prosecuting counsel.
Copy !req
2623. A man appointed,
not by the board,
Copy !req
2624. but by Lewis Strauss.
Copy !req
2625. Who was this?
Copy !req
2626. I’m sorry?
Copy !req
2627. Who was this?
Copy !req
2628. Uh, Roger Robb.
Copy !req
2629. Mrs. Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2630. Did you have a Communist
Party membership card?
Copy !req
2631. I’m--
Copy !req
2632. I’m not sure.
Copy !req
2633. Not sure?
Copy !req
2634. Well--
Copy !req
2635. Well?
Copy !req
2636. I mean, presumably,
the act of joining the Party
Copy !req
2637. required sending some money
and receiving a card, no?
Copy !req
2638. Yeah.
Copy !req
2639. Sorry.
Copy !req
2640. Yeah.
Copy !req
2641. It’s just it was all so very
long ago, Mr. Robb, wasn’t it?
Copy !req
2642. - Not really.
- Long enough to have forgotten.
Copy !req
2643. Did you return the card
or rip it up?
Copy !req
2644. The card whose existence
I’ve forgotten?
Copy !req
2645. - Your Communist Party membership card.
- Haven’t the slightest idea.
Copy !req
2646. Can a distinction be made between
Soviet communism and communism?
Copy !req
2647. In the days when I was a member, I
thought they were definitely two things.
Copy !req
2648. I thought that the Communist
Party of the United States
Copy !req
2649. was concerned with
our domestic problems.
Copy !req
2650. I now no longer believe this.
Copy !req
2651. I believe the thing’s linked together
and spread all over the world,
Copy !req
2652. and I have believed this since
I left the Party, 16 years ago.
Copy !req
2653. - But--
- 17 years ago. My mistake.
Copy !req
2654. - But you sai--
- Sorry, 18.
Copy !req
2655. 18 years ago.
Copy !req
2656. Are you familiar with the fact your
husband was making contributions
Copy !req
2657. to the Spanish Civil War
as late as 1942?
Copy !req
2658. I knew that Robert
gave money from time to time.
Copy !req
2659. Did you know this money was
going into Communist Party channels?
Copy !req
2660. - Don’t you mean "through"?
- Pardon?
Copy !req
2661. I think you mean "through
Communist Party channels," don’t you?
Copy !req
2662. Yes!
Yes?
Copy !req
2663. - Yes!
- Yes.
Copy !req
2664. Then would it be fair to say
that this meant that by 1942,
Copy !req
2665. your husband had not stopped having
anything to do with the Communist Party?
Copy !req
2666. You don’t have
to answer that yes or no.
Copy !req
2667. You can answer that
any way you wish.
Copy !req
2668. I know that, thank you.
Copy !req
2669. It’s your question.
Copy !req
2670. It’s not properly phrased.
Copy !req
2671. - Do you understand what I’m getting at?
- I do.
Copy !req
2672. Then why don’t you
answer it that way?
Copy !req
2673. ’Cause I don’t like your phrase.
Copy !req
2674. "Having anything to do
with the Communist Party."
Copy !req
2675. Because Robert never had anything
to do with the Communist Party as such.
Copy !req
2676. I know he gave money
to Spanish refugees.
Copy !req
2677. I know he took an intellectual
interest in communist ideas--
Copy !req
2678. Are there two types
of communists?
Copy !req
2679. Intellectual communists and
your plain, old, regular commie?
Copy !req
2680. Well, I couldn’t
answer that one.
Copy !req
2681. I couldn’t either.
Copy !req
2682. Good evening.
Copy !req
2683. Robert,
you can’t win this thing.
Copy !req
2684. It’s a kangaroo court
with a predetermined outcome.
Copy !req
2685. Why put yourself through
more of it? I have my reasons.
Copy !req
2686. All right.
Copy !req
2687. Good night.
Copy !req
2688. He has a point.
Copy !req
2689. I’m not sure you understand, Albert.
Copy !req
2690. No?
Copy !req
2691. I left my country
never to return.
Copy !req
2692. You served your country well.
Copy !req
2693. If this is the reward
she offers you, then...
Copy !req
2694. perhaps you should
turn your back on her.
Copy !req
2695. Damn it, I happen
to love this country.
Copy !req
2696. Then tell them to go to hell.
Copy !req
2697. Interestingly enough,
Copy !req
2698. this is no longer
a confirmation hearing,
Copy !req
2699. it’s now a trial about a trial!
Copy !req
2700. It’s not good he’s telling
everyone you initiated the hearings.
Copy !req
2701. He can’t prove a goddamn thing.
Copy !req
2702. He certainly can’t prove
that I gave the file to Borden.
Copy !req
2703. We’re not in court, sir.
There’s no burden of proof.
Copy !req
2704. Right.
They’re not convicting...
Copy !req
2705. just denying.
Copy !req
2706. But why would Hill come here to
tear me down? What’s his angle?
Copy !req
2707. Do people need a reason
to do the right thing?
Copy !req
2708. As he sees it.
Copy !req
2709. I told you, Oppenheimer poisoned
the scientists against me,
Copy !req
2710. right from that first meeting.
Copy !req
2711. I don’t know what Oppenheimer
said to him that day,
Copy !req
2712. but Einstein
wouldn’t even meet my eye.
Copy !req
2713. Oppenheimer knows
how to manipulate his own.
Copy !req
2714. And at Los Alamos, he preyed
on the naivete of scientists
Copy !req
2715. who thought they’d get a say
in how we used their work.
Copy !req
2716. Don’t ever think
he was that naive himself.
Copy !req
2717. Doctor.
Copy !req
2718. During your work on the hydrogen bomb,
were you deterred by any moral qualms?
Copy !req
2719. Yes, of course.
Copy !req
2720. But you still got on with
your work, didn’t you?
Copy !req
2721. Yes, because this was work of exploration.
It was not the preparation of a weapon.
Copy !req
2722. You mean it was more of
an academic excursion?
Copy !req
2723. No, it is not an academic thing
whether you can build a hydrogen bomb.
Copy !req
2724. It’s a matter of life and death.
Copy !req
2725. By 1942,
you were actively pushing
Copy !req
2726. the development of the
hydrogen bomb, weren’t you?
Copy !req
2727. Pushing’s not the right word.
Supporting it and working on it, yes.
Copy !req
2728. So when did these moral qualms
become so strong
Copy !req
2729. that you actively opposed the
development of the hydrogen bomb?
Copy !req
2730. When it was suggested that it
be the policy of the United States
Copy !req
2731. to make these things at all
cost, without regard to the balance
Copy !req
2732. between these weapons and
atomic weapons as part of our arsenal.
Copy !req
2733. What do moral qualms
have to do with that?
Copy !req
2734. What do moral qualms
have to do with it? Yes.
Copy !req
2735. Oppenheimer wanted to own
the atomic bomb.
Copy !req
2736. He wanted to be the man
who moved the Earth.
Copy !req
2737. He talks about putting the
nuclear genie back in the bottle.
Copy !req
2738. Well, I’m here to tell you that I
know J. Robert Oppenheimer,
Copy !req
2739. and if he could do it all over,
he’d do it all the same.
Copy !req
2740. You know he’s never once said
that he regrets Hiroshima?
Copy !req
2741. He’d do it all over. Why?
Copy !req
2742. Because it made him the most
important man who ever lived.
Copy !req
2743. Well, we’ve freely used
the atomic bomb--
Copy !req
2744. In fact, Doctor, you assisted
in selecting the target
Copy !req
2745. to drop the atomic bomb
on Japan, didn’t you?
Copy !req
2746. - Yes.
- Then you knew, did you not,
Copy !req
2747. that by dropping that atomic
bomb on the target you selected,
Copy !req
2748. that thousands of civilians would
be killed or injured, is that correct?
Copy !req
2749. Yes, not as many as turned out--
Copy !req
2750. Oh. Well, how many
were killed or injured?
Copy !req
2751. 70,000.
Copy !req
2752. 70,000 at both Hiroshima and--
Copy !req
2753. 110,000 at both.
Copy !req
2754. On the day of each bombing?
Copy !req
2755. - Yes.
- And in the weeks and years that followed?
Copy !req
2756. It has been put at somewhere
between 50,000 and 100,000.
Copy !req
2757. - 220,000 dead, at least.
- Yes.
Copy !req
2758. Any moral scruples about that?
Copy !req
2759. Terrible ones.
Copy !req
2760. Yet you testified in here that the
bombing of Hiroshima was very successful.
Copy !req
2761. - Technically successful.
- Oh! Technically, it was very successful.
Copy !req
2762. And it is also alleged
to have helped end the war.
Copy !req
2763. Would you have been supportive of the
dropping of a hydrogen bomb on Hiroshima?
Copy !req
2764. - That would make no sense at all.
- Why?
Copy !req
2765. The target is too small.
Copy !req
2766. Well, supposing there had been
a target in Japan big enough
Copy !req
2767. for a thermonuclear weapon,
Copy !req
2768. would you have been opposed
to the dropping of it?
Copy !req
2769. This was not a problem
with which I was confronted--
Copy !req
2770. I’m confronting you
with it now, sir.
Copy !req
2771. It was all part of his plan.
Copy !req
2772. He wanted the glorious,
insincere guilt of the self-important
Copy !req
2773. to wear like a fucking crown.
Copy !req
2774. Say, "No, we cannot go down this
road," even as he knew we’d have to.
Copy !req
2775. Would you have been
opposed to the dropping...
Copy !req
2776. ...of a thermonuclear weapon on
Japan because of moral scruples?
Copy !req
2777. Yes, I believe I would, sir.
Copy !req
2778. Did you oppose the dropping
Copy !req
2779. of an atomic bomb on Hiroshima
because of moral scruples?
Copy !req
2780. - We set forth our arg--
- No, you.
Copy !req
2781. - I’m asking you. You!
- I set--
Copy !req
2782. I set forth our arguments
against dropping it,
Copy !req
2783. but I did not endorse them.
Copy !req
2784. You mean after working night and
day for three years building the bomb,
Copy !req
2785. you then argued
against the use of it.
Copy !req
2786. I was asked by the secretary of
war what the views of scientists were.
Copy !req
2787. I gave him the views against
and the views for.
Copy !req
2788. You supported the dropping
of the atom bomb on Japan.
Copy !req
2789. - What do you mean, "support"?
- You supported it.
Copy !req
2790. - You helped pick the target, didn’t you?
- I did my job.
Copy !req
2791. I was not in a policy-making
position at Los Alamos.
Copy !req
2792. I would have done anything
I was asked to do.
Copy !req
2793. Then you would have built
the H-bomb too, wouldn’t you?
Copy !req
2794. - I couldn’t.
- I didn’t ask you that, Doctor.
Copy !req
2795. And the GAC report,
Copy !req
2796. which you co-authored
after the Soviet atomic test,
Copy !req
2797. said a Super bomb
should never be built.
Copy !req
2798. What we meant--
What I meant was--
Copy !req
2799. - What you? Who? Who?
- What I meant--
Copy !req
2800. And wouldn’t the Russians do
anything to increase their strength?
Copy !req
2801. If we did it,
they would have to do it.
Copy !req
2802. Our efforts would only fuel their efforts,
just as it had with the atomic bomb.
Copy !req
2803. "Just as it had
with the atomic bomb," exactly!
Copy !req
2804. No moral scruples in 1945,
plenty in 1949.
Copy !req
2805. Dr. Oppenheimer...
Copy !req
2806. when did your strong
moral convictions develop
Copy !req
2807. with respect to
the hydrogen bomb?
Copy !req
2808. When it became clear to me...
Copy !req
2809. that we would tend
to use any weapon we had.
Copy !req
2810. J. Robert Oppenheimer
the Martyr.
Copy !req
2811. I gave him
exactly what he wanted.
Copy !req
2812. To be remembered for Trinity,
not Hiroshima.
Copy !req
2813. Not Nagasaki.
Copy !req
2814. He should be thanking me.
Copy !req
2815. Well, he’s not.
Copy !req
2816. Do we still have enough votes,
Copy !req
2817. or is the crowning moment
of my career
Copy !req
2818. about to become the most
public humiliation of my life?
Copy !req
2819. Full Senate’s about to vote.
You’ll scrape through.
Copy !req
2820. Great, then gather
the fucking press.
Copy !req
2821. Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer.
Copy !req
2822. This board, having heard
testimony from you
Copy !req
2823. and many of your current
and former colleagues,
Copy !req
2824. has come to the unanimous
conclusion that you are a loyal citizen.
Copy !req
2825. However, in the light
of your continuing associations
Copy !req
2826. and disregard for the security
apparatus of this country,
Copy !req
2827. together with your
somewhat disturbing conduct
Copy !req
2828. on the hydrogen bomb program,
Copy !req
2829. and the regrettable lack
of candor
Copy !req
2830. in certain of your responses
to this board,
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2831. we have voted two-to-one
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2832. to deny the renewal
of your security clearance.
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2833. A full written opinion,
with a dissent from Mr. Evans,
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2834. will be issued to the AEC
in the coming days.
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2835. That is all.
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2836. Gordon.
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2837. Robert.
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2838. Robert.
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2839. Don’t, uh...
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2840. Don’t take in the sheets.
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2841. - Sir.
- Two minutes. Two minutes.
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2842. You’ll get your shot.
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2843. Is it official?
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2844. Well, there were
a couple of unexpected holdouts.
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2845. I’m denied. Yeah?
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2846. I’m afraid so, sir.
All right.
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2847. Who were the holdouts?
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2848. Um... There were three,
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2849. led by the junior senator
from Massachusetts.
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2850. Young guy trying to make
a name for himself,
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2851. didn’t like
what you did to Oppenheimer.
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2852. What’s his name?
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2853. Uh, Kennedy. John F. Kennedy.
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2854. Kitty?
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2855. Did you think that if you
let them tar and feather you,
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2856. that the world
would forgive you?
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2857. It won’t.
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2858. We’ll see.
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2859. Goddamn it.
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2860. You told me I’d be okay.
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2861. Yeah, well, I didn’t have
all the facts, did I?
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2862. Here’s a fact.
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2863. President Eisenhower
pinned the Medal of Freedom
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2864. on my chest last year,
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2865. ’cause I’ve always done
what’s right for this country.
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2866. They don’t want me
in the Cabinet room?
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2867. Oh, that’s-- That’s fine.
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2868. Maybe they should just invite
Oppenheimer instead.
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2869. Maybe they will.
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2870. I told you, he turned the
scientists against me one by one,
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2871. starting with Einstein.
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2872. I told you about Einstein.
I saw him by the pond.
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2873. You did, but you know, sir,
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2874. since nobody really knows what
they said to each other that day,
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2875. is it possible they didn’t
talk about you at all?
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2876. Is it possible
they spoke about something
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2877. more important?
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2878. Mr. Strauss!
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2879. Oh!
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2880. Thank you.
Copy !req
2881. Albert.
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2882. Ah...
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2883. The man of the moment.
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2884. You once held
a reception for me.
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2885. In Berkeley. You gave
me an award, mmm? Yes.
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2886. You all thought that I had
lost the ability to understand
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2887. what I’d started.
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2888. So, the award
really wasn’t for me.
Copy !req
2889. It was for all of you, hmm?
Copy !req
2890. Now it’s your turn
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2891. to deal with the consequences
of your achievement.
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2892. And one day,
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2893. when they’ve
punished you enough...
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2894. they’ll serve you
salmon and potato salad.
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2895. Make speeches...
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2896. give you a medal.
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2897. Hello, Frank.
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2898. You’re happy, I’m happy.
Copy !req
2899. Pat you on the back,
tell you all is forgiven.
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2900. Just remember...
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2901. it won’t be for you.
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2902. It’ll be for them.
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2903. Albert.
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2904. When I came to you
with those calculations,
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2905. we thought we might start
a chain reaction
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2906. that would destroy
the entire world?
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2907. Mmm. I remember it well.
What of it?
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2908. I believe we did.
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