Word: signaler
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...name in the big black type. He was beginning to sag as a topic of conversation when Harry Truman came to his aid by injecting Joe into the Harry Dexter White case-in which McCarthy had had no part. Last week, with public hearings regarding Communism in the Army Signal Corps radar laboratories at Fort Monmouth, N.J., McCarthy was bouncing again...
From the Grave. Thirty-three Fort Monmouth employees already had been suspended by the Signal Corps, not as a result of McCarthy's investigation. Some had been reinstated; most were awaiting hearings. Of the 33, McCarthy called only one, Aaron Coleman, a classmate of Julius Rosenberg at the City College of New York, who went to Fort Monmouth in 1939, became a radar laboratory chief...
Possible espionage concerning Furry's work in the Signal Corps laboratories at Fort Monmouth; N.J., was supposed to be the topic of the investigation. McCarthy's current plan is to hold Furry's hearing in Boston along with the "sizeable number of persons" he intends to subpoena from "Project Lincoln" of Cambridge, the super-secret air force center, dealing with U.S. radur defenses...
...November 4, 1953, Furry appeared before the McCarthy Investigating Committee in a private hearing concerning alleged Communist Party activities when he worked with the Signal Corps laboratories. Furry denied at that time that he had ever been involved in any espionage work...
According to the Boston Herald, Hyam G. Yamins, a Newton scientist, will also be called by McCarthy's Senate subcommittee. Yamins, a civilian employee of the Signal Corps who served as liaison officer between M.I.T. and the Fort Monmouth laboratories, was suspended by the Army in October as a security risk...