Word: greenglasses
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Then he went on to tell how Rosenberg had planned an escape for the Greenglass family in February 1950, when the arrest of the British spy, Dr. Klaus Fuchs, had tipped the conspirators off to the fact that the FBI and Scotland Yard were hot on their trails. "Julius came to my house and woke me up," Greenglass testified. "Julius said Harry Gold was one of Fuchs's contacts, and that Gold would undoubtedly be arrested soon and that would lead to Julius. He said I would have to leave the country...
...Here." Greenglass got $5,000 from Rosenberg for their flight, he said, and he memorized a form letter which he was supposed to write to secretaries of Soviet ambassadors at various points on an escape route. It was a fantastic enterprise...
...first stop was to be Mexico City. Greenglass was to send the letter to the Soviet embassy and sign it I. Jackson. " was to wait three days . . ." said Greenglass. "On the third day I was supposed to go into the city and stand in a plaza with a statue of Columbus, at 5 o'clock...
...masquerade would end. Greenglass...
Some atom-bomb secrets came out-or partly out-last week. During the Manhattan spy trial (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS), confessed spy David Greenglass, who worked as a machine-shop foreman at Los Alamos, described sketchily the mechanism of the A-bomb used at Nagasaki. His testimony was not transcribed. But it was not suppressed entirely. The spies on trial could not be convicted without proof that they had given real and vital secrets to the Russians...