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Minor Nets. These men were the prime sources of information. There were minor spies and subsidiary nets in the Soviet apparatus.* On the Pacific coast, Communist Steve Nelson, now under indictment for contempt of Congress, organized a cell in the radiation laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley. Another ring operated around Chicago with Scientist Clarence Hiskey (also under indictment for contempt) as a chief contact. In New York, Yakovlev directed the activities of Courier Harry Gold, in his pickups from Fuchs and from Alfred Dean Slack (now serving 15 years for espionage), who gave Gold a sample...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SPIES: Worse Than Murder | 4/16/1951 | See Source »

...Listening in the defendants' box, Hermann Göring was incensed. "Dirty dog! Damned traitor!" he shouted. Later, Prosecution Witness Bach-Zelewski left Nörnberg a free man; on Oct. 15, 1946, Göring mysteriously thwarted the hangman by taking cyanide of potassium in his execution cell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: How Goring Died | 4/16/1951 | See Source »

...rnberg prison, Bach-Zelewski explained, he had kept the three phials of cyanide which all SS commanders regularly carried, for use in case of capture. Because he was a witness, not a prisoner, guards had not searched him. When Göring, who occupied the opposite cell, asked Bach-Zelewski for some poison, the general obliged. One day, as they met in the corridor, Bach-Zelewski slipped the phial to Göring under cover of a handshake. It was hidden inside a bar of G.I. laundry soap...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: How Goring Died | 4/16/1951 | See Source »

...door to the cell in Lepoglava Prison swung open. Inside, Archbishop Aloysius Stepinac, most important political prisoner in Titoist Yugoslavia, stood up to receive a visitor, A.P. Correspondent Alex Singleton. After 4½ years of a 16-year sentence imposed on him for alleged wartime collaboration with the Nazis, the prelate looked fit and unbroken. The newsman explained that Marshal Tito's regime had agreed to an uncensored interview and photographs. What message did the spiritual leader of Yugoslavia's 7,000,000 Roman Catholics have for the outside world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: YUGOSLAVIA: Where There Is Good Will . . . | 4/16/1951 | See Source »

Beveraggi-Allende said he was arrested with 19 others in September, 1948, without being told why, subjected to "blows and insults," and taken to a "small, dirty cell" in the National Penitentiary in Buenos Aires. Then, he said, he was taken to a long table and tied down so he couldn't move...

Author: By Edward J. Ottenheimer jr., | Title: Student Victim Hits Peronist Torture | 4/10/1951 | See Source »

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