Word: g-men
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Sweden's atomic physicists were going about their business as if The Bomb had never poisoned their science. No Swedish G-men breathed down their necks. No military censors enforced silence. Uranium deposits were under Government control, but the Government, apparently, did not intend to keep them out of the hands of free-researching scientists...
...peacetime, the sniperscope has a dubious future. Cops and G-men might use it. Peeping Toms and gangsters might find it helpful...
Last week Dr. Seaborg, speaking at Chicago, made another momentous announcement. By bombarding uranium and plutonium with high-energy helium ions, he produced two more elements: Nos. 95 and 96. He told little more about them, for like all atomic scientists, Dr. Seaborg still has G-men breathing down his neck. But all elements heavier than uranium are supposedly unstable. Numbers 95 and 96 will certainly be of interest to atomic bombardiers...
Brazilian G-men got suspicious. So did some of the Japs, when the Imperial Fleet failed to show up. Their joint conclusion: Sugai and henchmen were not patriots, but racketeers who had been inducing a banzai fervor in Jap planters, then buying up their landholdings for a song...
...Rochemont-Hathaway-Monks approach to a purely fictional drama somehow suggests that the people on the screen are real and just happen to have been caught by a fortuitous camera. Actually, some of the film's G-men are the real McCoy. The picture serves up, as an added fillip, real FBI shots of pre-Pearl Harbor traffic in & out of the German Embassy...