Click Here to Search to Get Phone Data Faster, Please Click to Search

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Click Here to Search to Get Phone Data Faster, Please Click to Search Click here to search To get phone data faster, please click to search button! (412) 417-9874 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9164 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9697 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1929 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5054 Roxane Filson Irwin,1939 Diane Merle Drive More info (412) 417-0369 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4480 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4523 Steve Strain Pittsburgh,1636 Middle Street More info (412) 417-7224 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8307 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9484 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7812 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8079 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0900 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0078 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1845 Lisa Anderson Mc Donald,5333 Terrace View Drive More info (412) 417-1662 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9796 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2489 Donna Crumley Springdale,430 Bechman Street More info (412) 417-6676 Oliver Caminos Monroeville,200 James Place| N/ A More info (412) 417-4229 William Kilburn Pittsburgh,5011 Dolores Drive More info (412) 417-2323 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0274 Stacey Bell Pittsburgh,6231 Penn Avenue More info (412) 417-4233 Daniel Galvis Pittsburgh,18 Maplewood Avenue More info (412) 417-7690 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9227 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1619 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5685 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4384 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1936 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0053 Katherine Szmyd Allison Park,2638 Sapling Drive More info (412) 417-4958 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7778 Edrenia Crick Pittsburgh,7222 Everton Street More info (412) 417-3322 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1286 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9859 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4440 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2896 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2581 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-3000 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1204 Cathy Doolittle Beaver Falls,1904 6th Street More info (412) 417-7075 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1892 Kathleen Shaw Canonsburg,1029 Woodridge Drive More info (412) 417-6245 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8509 Lori Peterman Pittsburgh,31 N Emily Street More info (412) 417-2447 Timothy Mayernik Braddock,146 5th Avenue More info (412) 417-8377 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6619 Randi Sigal Pittsburgh,532 Colquitt Drive More info (412) 417-6953 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4099 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9006 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0734 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7145 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7886 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5251 Joseph Grogan Brentwood,64 West Francis More info (412) 417-7942 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4094 James Welsh Murrysville,4090 Spruce Road More info (412) 417-9337 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8939 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7644 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6230 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8545 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2293 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-3448 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5114 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7613 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0047 Susan Randall Pittsburgh,9217 Valley Street More info (412) 417-4219 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6006 Elisa Pegher University Park,204 Hastings Hall More info (412) 417-5418 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7434 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2923 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4461 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1349 Rose Nachylowski Pittsburgh,99 S 13th Street More info (412) 417-0710 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5550 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7278 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5468 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7067 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1343 Jane Bobich Monroeville,213 College Park Drive More info (412) 417-4210 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1849 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-3385 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8031 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1357 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8363 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0493 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9570 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7208 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7035 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0840 Michael Crespy Pittsburgh,827 Cedarwood Drive More info (412) 417-3240 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6369 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0799 Tammy Simmers Natrona Heights,1421 2nd Street More info (412) 417-0337 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8461 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-3086 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4134 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7187 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2479 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4963 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1943 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6177 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5485 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8138 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2704 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8645 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0525 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8446 Elmer Pelcher Pittsburgh,1336 Kinmount Street More info (412) 417-4471 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0313 Albert Wichmann Pittsburgh,17610 de Witt Avenue More info (412) 417-2396 Jeffrey Knoll Glenshaw,112 Weaver Drive More info (412) 417-8784 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8159 Delores Bowser Pittsburgh,3810 Penn Avenue More info (412) 417-7255 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1760 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0477 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4028 Anthony Ionadi Harrison City,6 Saxony Drive More info (412) 417-8914 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6046 John Poloveina Duquesne,806 Klere Street More info (412) 417-8248 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6517 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9716 Wila Black Pittsburgh,33 Penn Circle W More info (412) 417-9672 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2740 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1522 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1207 Susan Herward Pittsburgh,4022 Greensburg Pike More info (412) 417-2954 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7262 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-3351 Allya Burkhart Bridgeville,159 Beram Avenue More info (412) 417-0327 Cindy Deklaven Pittsburgh,1304 Clara Street More info (412) 417-2508 Mary Buford Pittsburgh,1322 Woodlawn Street More info (412) 417-4109 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0741 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9675 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4148 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-3053 Myrna Christopher Coraopolis,130 Cliff Mine Road More info (412) 417-8905 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1856 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1886 Anthony Antonelli Pittsburgh,4146 Rockwood Drive More info (412) 417-0509 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8161 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-3343 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4499 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9856 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8352 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2223 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-6592 Monica Singleton Homestead,109 1/2 E 19th Avenue More info (412) 417-5119 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7403 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0494 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-4428 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8776 Lawrence Vanallen Pittsburgh,118 Hollywood Street More info (412) 417-5353 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1276 Robert Treese Pittsburgh,92 Dewey Street More info (412) 417-0040 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-5205 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8546 Tammy Dowd Bethel Park,334 Church Road More info (412) 417-9359 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1060 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8796 J. Vastine Pittsburgh,1411 Chestnut Ridge Drive More info (412) 417-7274 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1342 Tammy Stellfox Butler,228 S Eberhart Road More info (412) 417-9902 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8041 Harry George Evans City,1089 Prospect Rd More info (412) 417-1865 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-9528 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1193 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0911 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7269 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7458 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-2899 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-0865 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8736 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-1347 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-8409 Available Data Avaiable More info (412) 417-7022 Available
Recommended publications
  • Biographyelizabethbentley.Pdf
    Tseng 2003.10.24 14:06 6655 Olmsted / RED SPY QUEEN / sheet 1 of 284 QUEEN RED SPY Tseng 2003.10.24 14:06 6655 Olmsted / RED SPY QUEEN / sheet 2 of 284 3 of 284 6655 Olmsted / RED SPY QUEEN / sheet RED SPY QUEEN A Biography of ELIZABETH BENTLEY Kathryn S.Olmsted The University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill and London Tseng 2003.10.24 14:06 4 of 284 © 2002 6655 Olmsted / RED SPY QUEEN / sheet The University of North Carolina Press All rights reserved Set in Charter, Champion, and Justlefthand types by Tseng Information Systems, Inc. Manufactured in the United States of America The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Olmsted, Kathryn S. Red spy queen : a biography of Elizabeth Bentley / by Kathryn S. Olmsted. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 0-8078-2739-8 (cloth : alk. paper) 1. Bentley, Elizabeth. 2. Women communists—United States—Biography. 3. Communism—United States— 1917– 4. Intelligence service—Soviet Union. 5. Espionage—Soviet Union. 6. Informers—United States—Biography. I. Title. hx84.b384 o45 2002 327.1247073'092—dc21 2002002824 0605040302 54321 Tseng 2003.10.24 14:06 5 of 284 To 6655 Olmsted / RED SPY QUEEN / sheet my mother, Joane, and the memory of my father, Alvin Olmsted Tseng 2003.10.24 14:06 Tseng 2003.10.24 14:06 6655 Olmsted / RED SPY QUEEN / sheet 6 of 284 7 of 284 Contents Preface ix 6655 Olmsted / RED SPY QUEEN / sheet Acknowledgments xiii Chapter 1.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT Title of Document: from the BELLY of the HUAC: the RED PROBES of HOLLYWOOD, 1947-1952 Jack D. Meeks, Doctor of Philos
    ABSTRACT Title of Document: FROM THE BELLY OF THE HUAC: THE RED PROBES OF HOLLYWOOD, 1947-1952 Jack D. Meeks, Doctor of Philosophy, 2009 Directed By: Dr. Maurine Beasley, Journalism The House Un-American Activities Committee, popularly known as the HUAC, conducted two investigations of the movie industry, in 1947 and again in 1951-1952. The goal was to determine the extent of communist infiltration in Hollywood and whether communist propaganda had made it into American movies. The spotlight that the HUAC shone on Tinsel Town led to the blacklisting of approximately 300 Hollywood professionals. This, along with the HUAC’s insistence that witnesses testifying under oath identify others that they knew to be communists, contributed to the Committee’s notoriety. Until now, historians have concentrated on offering accounts of the HUAC’s practice of naming names, its scrutiny of movies for propaganda, and its intervention in Hollywood union disputes. The HUAC’s sealed files were first opened to scholars in 2001. This study is the first to draw extensively on these newly available documents in an effort to reevaluate the HUAC’s Hollywood probes. This study assesses four areas in which the new evidence indicates significant, fresh findings. First, a detailed analysis of the Committee’s investigatory methods reveals that most of the HUAC’s information came from a careful, on-going analysis of the communist press, rather than techniques such as surveillance, wiretaps and other cloak and dagger activities. Second, the evidence shows the crucial role played by two brothers, both German communists living as refugees in America during World War II, in motivating the Committee to launch its first Hollywood probe.
    [Show full text]
  • F0P ·Sl381tm' 'Filltj& Y.EN Qi\;;
    'F0P ·Sl381tM' 'filltJ& Y.EN Qi\;; ... - ~ ·- Reissue (1'911) To: HOSCOU !lo: 68'1 13 14ay 194..,! On llELMSlolAH' t[RULEVOJ)[i) instruction• COOO OIRL(UM!frraA(ii) contaetcd throu&I> AHr[lII) a nev group(~ in CARrRAOE)[~ KAAPAO~llJ(iv): [53 group• Ull!'ecoverabl•) f.tAGD07P" - "'KAlll'"[v). GOOD GIRL'• tmpna11ona: They aro reliable FBLUll­ COUltl'RYM!ll[ZEMLYaJ<I)[vi), poUtica.14' t>i&I>~ •ture; they Wont to t>elp vitb intomat1on. 'l'be7 aa.id. that they had been oeglect..d. &Dd. oo ooe bad takea any 1Dtereat 1n their pc>teot1al.1t1ea 129 groups unrecoverel>le) 'STORll(SbTORll)' (vii). RAIDER(Rl!Jll!R)( "111 ), PUUI( l.01')( l.lt), TJ.D(x) &n<I KAJrr vill IP to Tnlll[TIR)(xi) once enrr tvo veeu io tura. PWHB &n<I Tm ii.Dov PAL[PEL)[xii). lie shall let you have identi!Y1ng partlcu.l.&r1 later. llo. 373 MAYOR(MER)(x111) Coanent1: (ii llEUIS~: Earl BH)Wl)ER. ( 11) OOOD OillL: Elizabetb BEllI!ZY. (Hi) »tr: Pre1umal>~ a lli1t&ke tor Jot>n Am. See ..Uo MEW YORK to 1CSOOW Jlo. 586 of 29 AprU l9114:" (S/ll!SP/Tlll). (iv) CARn!AGB: llA.Sllill:TOll, D.C. (v) KA1'1': ll&ory Semiel llfGXll'I'. (Yi) F'£l.JD/ COUlm!DIEll: Ned>en or a c-.ni•t hrt;r. ("11) 9l'ORll: llD1dent1tied. (Yiii) RAIDER: Vietor PERLO. (ix) PLLMI: Poaaib~ Qiarlet KJW4ER. (xi Tm: ~~ !l:lw.rd Josepb PlTZCERALD. (xi) TYRB : 111111 YO!U( crrr. (xii) PAL: Nathan Gregory SILVElf.IAS'l'ER.
    [Show full text]
  • Whittaker Chambers Testifies" Carroll County Times Article for 16 August 1998 by Jay A
    "Whittaker Chambers Testifies" Carroll County Times article for 16 August 1998 By Jay A. Graybeal In August 1948, Whittaker Chambers, A Time magazine editor who lived on a farm on Bachman's Valley Rd. in Carroll County, read a prepared statement charging that a number of government officials were communists. The story was published in the August 6 issue of the Westminster Democratic Advocate newspaper: "FORMER COMMUNIST TESTIFIES BEFORE COMMITTEE Whitaker Chambers, living on Bachman's Valley road, on the Thomas farm, who said he was a Communist from 1924 to 1937 testified Tuesday that the Red 'underground' then included Alger Hiss, State Department official, before the House of Un-American Activities Committee, in Washington on Tuesday. Chambers, now an associate editor of Time magazine, said in a prepared statement read to the House committee that he himself 'served in the underground, chiefly in Washington.' He said there was an underground organization developed, to the best of his knowledge, by Harold Ware, one of the sons of the Communist leader known as 'Mother Bloor.' He went on: 'I knew it at its top level, a group of seven or so men, from among whom, in the late years, certain members of Miss (Elizabeth T.) Bentley's organization were apparently recruited.' 'The head of the underground group was Nathan Witt, an attorney for the National Labor Relations Board. Later John Abt became the leader. 'Lee Pressman was also a member of this group, as was Alger Hiss, who, as a member of the State Department, later organized the conferences at Dumbarton Oaks, San Francisco and the United States side of the [Y]alta Conference.' Miss Bentley, mentioned by Chambers, is the young woman who told a sensational story last week of collecting information for the Russians from scores of Government employees during the war.
    [Show full text]
  • “A Sinister Poison”: the Red Scare Comes to Bethel
    “A Sinister Poison”: The Red Scare Comes to Bethel The Bethel–Randolph Center incident is a story that features several colorful figures, including a Tibetan Buddhist dignitary, a local self-described “red hunter,” and two well-traveled and prolific writers: Far East expert Owen Lattimore and Arctic explorer Vilhjalmur Stefansson. By RICK WINSTON ere’s a question that might stump many Vermont history buffs: who was Ordway Mabson Southard? A May 2001 obit- H uary for this prolifi c poet and haiku specialist mentioned some of the places he and his wife Mary had lived: Alaska, Mexico, Al- abama, Hawaii, and fi nally British Columbia—but not Vermont.1 Yet it was here in the summer of 1950 that the Southards were the catalysts for an episode that landed Vermont in the national news. Only a passing obituary reference to their political activities (“Both were highly infl uenced by Marxist Socialist thought and participated in the Civil Rights Movement”) gives a clue to the events that led to headlines such as the one in the August 3 issue of the Bradford Opinion: “Reds Infest Bethel, Randolph Center, McCarthy Charges.”2 . RICK WINSTON was co-owner of Montpelier’s Savoy Theater for twenty-nine years, and is currently programming director for the Green Mountain Film Festival. He was one of the organizers of the 1988 conference “Vermont in the McCarthy Era,” co-sponsored by the Vermont Historical Society, and is continuing to re- search the period. If anyone has memories of that time in Vermont, contact him at <[email protected]>.
    [Show full text]
  • Reactions of Congress to the Alger Hiss Case, 1948-1960
    Soviet Spies and the Fear of Communism in America Reactions of Congress to the Alger Hiss Case, 1948-1960 Mémoire Brigitte Rainville Maîtrise en histoire Maître ès arts (M.A.) Québec, Canada © Brigitte Rainville, 2013 Résumé Le but de ce mémoire est de mettre en évidence la réaction des membres du Congrès des États-Unis dans le cadre de l'affaire Alger Hiss de 1948 à 1960. Selon notre source principale, le Congressional Record, nous avons pu faire ressortir les divergences d'opinions qui existaient entre les partisans des partis démocrate et républicain. En ce qui concerne les démocrates du Nord, nous avons établi leur tendance à nier le fait de l'infiltration soviétique dans le département d'État américain. De leur côté, les républicains ont profité du cas de Hiss pour démontrer l'incompétence du président Truman dans la gestion des affaires d'État. Il est intéressant de noter que, à la suite de l'avènement du républicain Dwight D. Eisenhower à la présidence en 1953, un changement marqué d'opinions quant à l'affaire Hiss s'opère ainsi que l'attitude des deux partis envers le communisme. Les démocrates, en fait, se mettent à accuser l'administration en place d'inaptitude dans l'éradication des espions et des communistes. En ayant recours à une stratégie similaire à celle utilisée par les républicains à l'époque Truman, ceux-ci n'entachent toutefois guère la réputation d'Eisenhower. Nous terminons en montrant que le nom d'Alger Hiss, vers la fin de la présidence Eisenhower, s'avère le symbole de la corruption soviétique et de l'espionnage durant cette période marquante de la Guerre Froide.
    [Show full text]
  • 1955 HON. KARL M. Lecompte HON. VICTOR L. ANFUSO
    1955 CONGRESSIONAL _RECORD- HOUSE 261' EXTENSIONS OF REMARKS. Statement. of Counterpart Funds Charged Public Law 665, 83d Congress, pro­ Unfortunately, our immigration laws vides that any ·committee of the House in recent ·years have been rather harsh, to Committees of the House of Repre· of Representatives which uses counter­ discriminatory, .and often inhumane. sentatives part funds shall make a full report The McCarran-Walter Act was intended thereof to the Committee on House Ad­ to be a codification of all previous immi­ ministration, showing the total amount gration and naturalization laws, but ac­ EXTENSION OF REMARKS of such currency so used in each country tually turned out to be a codification of OF and the purposes for which it was ex­ all the discriminations and the preju­ pended. dices against immigrants thought up HON. KARL M. LeCOMPTE during the past few decades. I am re­ OF IOWA ferring particularly to the quota system, IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Revision of the McCarran Immigration . the method of selecting immigrants who Tuesday, January 11, 1955 Law seek entry to this country, which dates back to the early 1920's when it was first Mr. LECOMPTE. Mr. Speaker, on EXTENSION OF REMARKS enacted in an atmosphere of isolationism 2~. January 1954, I inserted in the CoN­ OF and hatred of all foreigners. GRESSIONAL RECORD a statement With ref­ Under the quota system a total of erence to the history and use of counter­ HON. VICTOR L. ANFUSO 154,000 immigrants may be admitted an­ part funds by Members of the House of OF NEW YORK nually to the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • To Download the PDF File
    White Notebook #2 1 Translation of original notes from KGB archive Files by Alexander Vassiliev (1993-1996) Translated by Steve Shabad, reviewed and edited by Alexander Vassiliev and John Earl Haynes (2007) [Pagination and formatting track the handwritten original notebook. Phrases in English in the original are italicized. Phrases that were transliterated from English to Russian in the original are in Arial font. Marginal comments in the left margin are chiefly page numbers from the archival file while those in the right margin are Vassiliev’s topic designations, his own comments, or notes to himself. Endnotes were added in translation.] ************************************************************************************************* File 70545 “Myrna” p. 3 “Complex” U.S. Shipping Corp. World Tourists “Complex” p. 9 Elizabeth Bentley was unknown to the Comintern. An inquiry was sent to the Comintern in November 1939 (p. 8). p. 19 “Clever Girl” established contact with “Pal” in March-April 1942. A cipher cable from Maxim “Pal” regarding this is dated 5.04.42. She was instructed to keep regular contact with him once or twice a month. p. 21 More precisely: Letter from NY to C 19.4.42 “Clever Girl” traveled to see “Pal” on 30 March 1942. “Sound” was forbidden to meet with “Pal” because of the investigation of the latter. p. 22 After that contact was maintained through Lud Ullmann, who would come to NY. Sometimes “Clever Girl” traveled to Wash. Now the station gets all the materials from Sound and Pal through Clever Girl, with whom “Sergey’s” wife, “Shura,” is in contact. “Shura” passes the materials to “Stock” or another operative.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of Soviet Spy Networks in the United States Throughout the Twentieth Century Julia S
    Union College Union | Digital Works Honors Theses Student Work 6-2015 An Analysis of Soviet Spy Networks in the United States Throughout the Twentieth Century Julia S. Shively Union College - Schenectady, NY Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Shively, Julia S., "An Analysis of Soviet Spy Networks in the United States Throughout the Twentieth Century" (2015). Honors Theses. 391. https://digitalworks.union.edu/theses/391 This Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Work at Union | Digital Works. It has been accepted for inclusion in Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of Union | Digital Works. For more information, please contact [email protected]. An Analysis of Soviet Spy Networks in the United States Throughout the Twentieth Century By Julia S. Shively ********* Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Honors in the Department of History Union College June, 2015 Chapter 1: Spies Before the War The Soviet Union and the United States have always had a complicated relationship. When the Bolshevik Revolution of 1921 brought the communist party to power in Russia, the United States government did not recognize the new regime. The communist ideologies of the newly established state did not line up well with the democratic ideals of the United States. These new communist principles threatened the strength of the American system, as labor disputes and the Great Depression gave citizens reason to question capitalism’s effectiveness. The fear of this system grew as the world progressed through the twentieth century when the Soviet Union shifted from ally to enemy in all but a few years.
    [Show full text]
  • The Trial of Harry Dexter White: Soviet Agent of Influence
    University of New Orleans ScholarWorks@UNO University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations Dissertations and Theses 12-17-2004 The Trial of Harry Dexter White: Soviet Agent of Influence Tom Adams University of New Orleans Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td Recommended Citation Adams, Tom, "The Trial of Harry Dexter White: Soviet Agent of Influence" (2004). University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations. 177. https://scholarworks.uno.edu/td/177 This Thesis is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by ScholarWorks@UNO with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Thesis in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights- holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Thesis has been accepted for inclusion in University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UNO. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE TRIAL OF HARRY DEXTER WHITE: SOVIET AGENT OF INFLUENCE A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the University of New Orleans in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in The Department of History by Tom A. Adams B.A., Ambassador University, 1975 December 2004 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Late at night, when you are alone with your keyboard, overwhelmed by the mass of information that has to be synthesized, and frozen by writer’s block it is comforting to know you are not entirely on your own.
    [Show full text]
  • The Web of Subversion BOOKSBYJAMESBURNHAM
    The Web of Subversion BOOKSBYJAMESBURNHAM THE MANAGERIAL REVOLUTION THE MACHIAVELLIANS THE STRUGGLE FOR THE WORLD THE COMING DEFEAT OF COMMUNISM CONTAINMENT OR LIBERATION? THE WEB OF SUBVERSION INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS (With Philip Wheelwright) THE CASE FOR DE GAULLE (With André Malraux) JAMES BURNHAM The Web of Subversion UNDERGROUND NETWORKS IN THE U. S. GOVERNMENT THE JOHN DAY COMPANY New York Copyright, 1954, by James Burnham Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 54-7583 All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission. Published by The John Day Com­ pany, 62 West 45th Street, New York 36, N .Y., and on the same day in Canada by Longmans, Green & Company, Toronto. MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AMERICAN BOOK-STRATFORD PRESS, INC. NEW YORK Acknowledgments THE ORIGINALIDEA for this book, and many specific suggestions for the way in which to write it, came from Paul Palmer. I wish to thank the staffs of the Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security, the House Committee on Un -American Activities and the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Inves­ tigations for their invariably courteous and informed as­ sistance. I am indebted to C. Dickerman Williams for illumination on the subject of the Fifth Amendment, and for supplying the quotations concerning it that I have used in Chapters 2 and 17. I am grateful to Random House for permission to quote from Witness, by Whittaker Chambers (1952). My wife has helped me throughout, in the analysis of the enormous mass of evidence upon which this book is based as well as in the technical preparation of the manuscript.
    [Show full text]
  • JOHN J. ABT the Testimony of John J
    Mr. DOBBS. No; we do not. We have sought voluntarily to provide you every- thing we have in the spirit of giving you whatever cooperation we could, and we have given you all the information we had. Mr. RANKIN. And that includes anything, either oral or in writing? Mr. DOBBS. Correct. Mr. RANKIN. Thank you very much, Mr. Dobbs. TESTIMONY OF JOHN J. ABT The testimony of John J. Abt was taken at 9:30 a.m., on April 1’7, 1964, at the U.S. courthouse, Foley Square, New York, N.Y., by Messrs. J. Lee Rankin, general counsel, and Wesley J. Liebeler, assistant counsel of the President’s Commission. John Abt, having been first duly sworn, was examined and testified as follows : Mr. RANKIN. Will you state your name? Mr. ABT. John J. Abt. Mr. RANKIN. Where do you live? Mr. ABT. 444 Central Park West, New York City. Mr. RANKIN. You are a practicing attorney in the city of New York? Mr. ABT. I am. Mr. RANKIN. How long have you been practicing law? Mr. ABT. A long time, Mr. Rankin, since 1927. You do the mathematics. Mr. RANKIN. You have been informed, I am sure, that Lee Harvey Oswald, after his arrest, tried to reach you to request that you act as his counsel. I don’t know how you were informed, but I have seen it in the newspapers. When did it first come to your attention? Mr. ABT. May I tell you the story, Mr. Rankin ? Perhaps that is the simplest way. Mr. RANKIN.
    [Show full text]