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Saville Sax
View on WikipediaSaville Sax (July 26, 1924 – September 25, 1980) was the Harvard College roommate of Theodore Hall, who recruited Hall for the Soviets and acted as a courier to move the atomic secrets from Los Alamos to the Soviets.[1][2]
Key Information
Biography
[edit]Saville Sax was born in New York City on July 26, 1924, and went by the name of Savvy Sax. He was the son of Bernard Sax (1896–1936) and Bluma Sax (1895–1986). Bluma and Bernard were both born in Russia, of Jewish ancestry. In 1930 they were living in Manhattan with their grandfather Jacob Sax (1874–?).[3][4] Saville was introduced to Soviet agents by his mother, Bluma, who worked for a Communist front organization called Russian War Relief.[5][6] Sax went by the cover name "Oldster", and periodically traveled to New Mexico to collect information from Hall.
Saville had a son, Boria Sax,[7][8] a daughter, Sarah Sax, and a sister, Anne Saville Arenberg (1925-1967).[9]
After drifting from job to job, Saville ended up teaching "values clarification" in a Great Society funded education program called NEXTEP,[10] when he was "something of an adult hippie, disheveled in his personal habits and given to LSD and other hallucinogenic drugs" and "openly boasted of his role in the [atomic] spying".[11] He died on September 25, 1980, in Edwardsville, Illinois. He was survived by his wife and three children.
References
[edit]- ^ Alan S. Cowell (November 10, 1999). "Theodore Hall, Prodigy and Atomic Spy, Dies at 74". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
Mr. Albright and Ms. Kunstel say Mr. Hall and a former Harvard roommate, Saville Sax, approached a Soviet trade company in New York in late 1944 and began supplying critical information about the atomic project.
- ^ Harold Jackson (November 16, 1999). "Theodore Hall. US scientist-spy who escaped prosecution and spent 30 years in biological research at Cambridge". The Guardian. Retrieved 2010-12-19.
This was the only message that ever mentioned Hall, and his fellow spy Saville Sax, by name. All other references used their code names - MLAD (Young) for Hall and STAR (Old) for Sax - which the Venona team had unravelled much earlier but could not identify. The message had been sent shortly after Hall had started work at Los Alamos.
- ^ Bernard Sax (1896–1936) was born in 1896 according to the census and may have died in 1936 according to the New York City Death Index
- ^ 1930 US Census for Manhattan, New York
- ^ Unlocking the Crypts: Most Spies Code Revealed Escaped Prosecution. The Washington Post, December 25, 1996
- ^ "Secrets, Lies, and Atomic Spies | Boria Sax". PBS NOVA. Retrieved 2024-07-07.
- ^ Boria Sax (October 5, 1997). "The Boy Who Gave Away the Bomb". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-07-18.
- ^ "Theodore Alvin Hall and Saville Sax". PBS. Archived from the original on 2008-09-22. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
- ^ "Deaths". The New York Times. April 22, 1967.
Arenberg-Anne, beloved wife of ... devoted mother of Bernard, loving daughter of Bluma Sax, dear sister of Saville Sax.
- ^ "Traitors In Our Midst". The Washington Post. October 19, 1997.
After drifting from job to job, Saville Sax finally wound up teaching "values clarification" in a Great Society-funded education program called NEXTEP.
- ^ Neil Sheehan, A Fiery Peace in a Cold War: Bernard Schriever and the Ultimate Weapon (New York: Random House, 2009), p. 110.
External links
[edit]- "Family of Spies" by Bluma Sax's grandson Boria Sax, WGBH
Saville Sax
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Family Background
Childhood and Upbringing
Saville Sax was born on July 26, 1924, in New York City to parents Bernard Sax (1896–1936) and Bluma Sax (1895–1986).[8] His family resided in an immigrant Jewish community in the city, where economic conditions were often precarious for such households during the interwar period.[8] Sax's father died in 1936 when Saville was 12 years old, leaving the family to navigate financial difficulties amid the lingering effects of the Great Depression.[8] This early loss contributed to a challenging upbringing in a tight-knit urban environment shaped by immigrant networks and limited resources.[9] As a youth, Sax displayed early intellectual interests, including contributions of articles and poems to issues two and three of Chan Davis's science fiction fanzine Blitherings in the 1940s.[10] These writings reflected an emerging engagement with speculative fiction and related fan communities, indicative of his precocious curiosity in scientific and imaginative topics.[10]Family Influences and Ideological Formation
Saville Sax was born on July 26, 1924, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Bernard Sax (1896–1936) and Bluma Sax (1895–1986), both Russian-born Jewish immigrants who had settled in the United States.[11] The family's immigrant roots from tsarist Russia exposed Sax to narratives of persecution and revolutionary upheaval, common among Eastern European Jewish communities fleeing pogroms and economic hardship in the early 20th century. During the Great Depression, which intensified economic struggles for working-class immigrant families like the Saxes, leftist ideologies gained traction in urban Jewish American circles, where socialist and communist groups organized labor unions, relief efforts, and anti-capitalist agitation.[12] Bluma Sax played a direct role in channeling these influences toward Soviet-aligned communism, working for Russian War Relief, a Communist Party front organization that funneled aid to the USSR while promoting pro-Soviet propaganda in the U.S.[11] Her involvement connected the family to networks of Communist sympathizers, including fraternal organizations and relief committees that framed the Soviet Union as a bulwark against fascism and economic despair, often subordinating U.S. national interests to ideological solidarity with Stalin's regime. Sax's own membership in the Young Communist League during his youth reflected this familial indoctrination, marking his shift from passive exposure to organized radicalism amid the 1930s' rise of popular fronts against fascism.[13] These pre-war associations, rooted in family ties to Party-affiliated groups, cultivated a worldview that equated anti-fascism with uncritical support for the USSR, laying the groundwork for later political actions without evident scrutiny of Soviet atrocities or internal contradictions.[12][14]Education and Harvard Years
Academic Pursuits
Saville Sax enrolled at Harvard College during the early 1940s, amid the United States' entry into World War II, when the institution adapted its curriculum with accelerated programs and wartime priorities influencing campus life.[1] His academic trajectory contrasted sharply with that of his roommate, Theodore Hall, a physics prodigy who excelled in scientific coursework; Sax, lacking similar aptitude in the hard sciences, initially gravitated toward literary and social pursuits rather than physics or mathematics.[15] Sax's interests extended to campus intellectual circles, where he engaged with leftist ideologies through affiliations such as the Young Communist League, reflecting the era's ideological ferment among some Harvard students influenced by anti-fascist sentiments and Soviet alliances against Nazi Germany.[13] He contributed articles and poems to fanzines like Blitherings, edited by fellow Harvard student Chan Davis, indicating involvement in informal literary and speculative fiction communities that intersected with progressive politics.[10] Later, Sax reentered Harvard intending to study physics, possibly inspired by Hall's success, but he flunked out, underscoring his limited proficiency in quantitative fields and redirecting his energies toward non-scientific endeavors during his undergraduate years.[15] This academic environment, marked by ideological discussions and wartime urgency, laid groundwork for personal relationships formed outside formal coursework.[1]Relationship with Theodore Hall
Saville Sax and Theodore Hall became roommates at Harvard University during Hall's second year, approximately 1943–1944, forging a close personal bond that extended beyond academics.[16] Hall, a teenage physics prodigy focused on advanced scientific pursuits, contrasted with Sax, a non-scientist whose interests leaned toward ideological and political matters, including sympathies toward leftist causes and concerns over global power imbalances.[4] Their shared living arrangement facilitated frequent discussions on the ethical implications of the U.S. atomic bomb project, where Hall expressed growing unease about America's potential monopoly on nuclear weapons, viewing it as a risk for unchecked U.S. dominance even amid the wartime alliance with the Soviet Union.[1] Rooted in mutual ideological alignments, including an appreciation for Soviet contributions to the Allied effort against Nazi Germany, Sax reinforced Hall's fears that withholding atomic knowledge from the Soviets could destabilize postwar equilibrium and invite aggression.[17] Sax, acting as an ideological confidant rather than a technical expert, played a pivotal role in persuading Hall of the moral necessity to share secrets, arguing from a perspective of pragmatic power symmetry to avert a one-sided nuclear hegemony, despite the alliance's underlying tensions.[1] This conviction emerged from their private conversations, where Sax emphasized first-hand reasoning on international equity over strict national loyalties, ultimately aligning Hall's prodigious talents with a commitment to bilateral knowledge transfer.[4] Their relationship, marked by trust and shared worldview, positioned Sax as Hall's key enabler in ideological recruitment, setting the stage for Hall's independent decision to act without direct Soviet prompting at the outset.[5]Espionage Activities
Recruitment and Initial Contact with Soviets
In October 1944, Theodore Hall, a young physicist recruited to the Manhattan Project, traveled to New York City on leave and confided in his Harvard roommate, Saville Sax, his intention to share atomic secrets with the Soviet Union to avert a potential American nuclear monopoly.[5] Sax, who shared leftist sympathies and had connections in progressive circles, agreed to facilitate the contact, initially approaching Amtorg, the Soviet-American trading organization in Manhattan, under the pretext of inquiring about relatives in the Soviet Union.[1] This outreach, leveraging Sax's familiarity with Soviet-affiliated entities, prompted a response from Soviet intelligence, leading to arrangements for a discreet handover.[18] Sax then visited the Soviet consulate in New York, where he conveyed Hall's offer of classified information on atomic bomb design, including preliminary concepts related to the implosion method for plutonium devices.[19] This initiated formal recruitment, with Soviet agent Iskhak Akhmerov—operating under the alias "Peter"—meeting Hall shortly thereafter to secure his commitment as a source, code-named "Mlad."[20] A Venona decrypt dated November 12, 1944, from Soviet handlers in New York to Moscow explicitly documents the recruitment process, noting Sax's role in bridging the introduction and Hall's provision of initial technical insights.[5] Hall later attributed his decision to ideological concerns over unilateral U.S. dominance in nuclear weaponry, framing it as an altruistic act to promote global equilibrium amid wartime alliance with the Soviets.[21] However, this assistance materially advanced the Stalinist regime's nuclear ambitions, which aligned with its post-war consolidation of control over Eastern Europe through mechanisms like the Red Army occupations and puppet governments established by 1945–1946, irrespective of the spies' stated anti-monopolist rationale.[3] Sax's intermediary efforts thus marked the entry point for one of the Manhattan Project's most productive unauthorized channels to Soviet intelligence.Role in Atomic Secrets Transmission
Saville Sax functioned as the primary courier for Theodore Hall's Manhattan Project intelligence in 1944 and 1945, physically transporting handwritten notes and sketches detailing the plutonium implosion lens design, explosive compression techniques, and bomb assembly processes from Los Alamos, New Mexico, to Soviet handlers in New York City.[1][4] Hall, assigned to the implosion physics group upon joining the project in early 1944, prepared these materials covertly and passed them to Sax during visits or mail drops, leveraging their Harvard roommate connection for trust and discretion.[5][12] A key handover occurred in late 1944, corroborated by the Venona project's decryption of a November 12 Soviet cable referencing "MLAD" (Hall's codename, denoting "young") and implicating "STAR" (Sax's codename, denoting "old" or "oldster") in relaying implosion data to NKVD officer Anatoly Yatskov at the Soviet consulate.[13][22] This intercept, part of the U.S. Army's Signal Intelligence Service efforts to break Soviet one-time pad codes, explicitly tied Sax's deliveries to accelerating Soviet understanding of plutonium bomb triggers, with Sax using pseudonyms and dead drops to minimize traces during New York meetings.[23][24] Sax's operations carried acute risks, including interception by U.S. counterintelligence amid heightened Manhattan Project security; he navigated train travel from the East Coast to New Mexico and back, concealing documents in luggage or on his person while evading FBI surveillance precursors.[3] Venona analysis later revealed Soviet handlers' concerns over Sax's exposure, as his mother's Communist front affiliations had initially facilitated contact but increased traceability.[11] Sax's active courier role diminished after Hall's December 1946 marriage to Joan Parker, who assumed subsequent transmission duties starting in 1947 to reduce reliance on external intermediaries and compartmentalize risks within the family unit.[25] This shift aligned with Soviet instructions to consolidate channels, though Venona traffic confirmed no further major Sax-mediated handovers post-1945.[4][18]Operational Methods and Risks
Saville Sax primarily served as a courier for Theodore Hall, receiving classified atomic information from Hall via mail and personally delivering it to Soviet handlers in New York City. Hall encoded sensitive details, such as equations related to plutonium implosion designs, using milk as invisible ink applied to the margins of newspapers, which he then posted to Sax from Los Alamos.[26] Sax forwarded these materials to contacts at Soviet trade organizations like Amtorg, employing personal handoffs to avoid traceable channels, in line with standard Soviet operational protocols that emphasized cutouts and minimal documentation.[3] Additional communications between Hall and Sax incorporated coded references to Walt Whitman poems to signal meetings or confirm receipt, further reducing the risk of interception.[3] These methods exposed Sax to significant personal risks, including potential detection by U.S. counterintelligence amid heightened wartime scrutiny of atomic personnel following incidents like the arrest of other spies. As a Harvard student maintaining a low-profile academic life in Cambridge and New York, Sax evaded routine FBI surveillance, which initially focused on more prominent figures rather than obscure undergraduates without criminal histories.[1] The reliance on physical couriering and invisible inks, while effective for secrecy, carried inherent vulnerabilities such as loss of materials in transit or handler betrayal, though no such breaches occurred during Sax's active period from late 1944 to 1945.[4] Declassified assessments post-Cold War indicate that the implosion-related secrets transmitted via Sax contributed to the Soviet Union's successful RDS-1 device, tested as Joe-1 on August 29, 1949, which replicated key American plutonium bomb features ahead of independent Soviet timelines. Historians attribute this acceleration partly to espionage inputs like Hall's data on explosive lenses, distinguishing it from broader Manhattan Project leaks by Klaus Fuchs.[4][26]Post-War Career and Evasion of Justice
Professional Endeavors in Education
Following World War II, Saville Sax entered the field of education, emphasizing progressive, student-centered pedagogies that prioritized interpersonal development and cooperative learning over traditional competitive models. In 1972, he co-authored Reality Games: Games People Ought to Play with Sandra Hollander, a collection of over 50 structured exercises inspired by transactional analysis theories from Eric Berne and Thomas Harris, intended to build communication skills, self-awareness, and relational dynamics in educational and therapeutic settings.[27][28] These activities were designed as "clearly structured interactions" to teach practical social competencies without reliance on authority-driven instruction.[27] Sax's work extended to classroom management techniques aligned with humanistic education trends of the 1970s, co-authoring A Peaceable Classroom: Activities to Calm and Free Student Energies in 1977 with Merrill Harmin. The book outlined non-competitive exercises to reduce aggression and promote emotional equilibrium in schools, such as guided reflections and group sharing protocols, reflecting broader anti-authoritarian ideals that favored intrinsic motivation and pacifist-oriented group harmony amid contemporary anti-war cultural currents.[29][30] By the late 1960s, after relocating to Illinois, Sax had advanced to a professorial role in education, contributing to programs focused on values-oriented teaching methods.[31][15] Throughout his career, Sax maintained a subdued public presence, producing outputs geared toward practical classroom implementation rather than high-profile advocacy. He continued these endeavors until his death on September 25, 1980, in Edwardsville, Illinois, at age 56.[8][10]FBI Investigation and Interrogation
In the late 1940s and early 1950s, U.S. Army Signal Intelligence Service cryptanalysts, as part of the top-secret Venona project, decrypted intercepted Soviet NKVD cables from 1944 and 1945 that referenced atomic espionage activities. These decrypts identified Saville Sax under the codename "STAR" (sometimes rendered as "Star" or "Oldster") and his associate Theodore Hall as "MLAD" (meaning "young" in Russian).[22][32] The partial nature of the decrypts, due to the one-time pad encryption system's complexity, provided circumstantial linkages but no standalone prosecutable evidence, as the Venona program's existence remained classified to protect sources and methods.[5] By 1949, specific Venona breaks, including a November 12, 1944, cable detailing meetings between "MLAD" and Soviet contacts via "STAR," prompted the FBI to prioritize Sax and Hall as suspects in atomic secrets transmission.[5] On March 16, 1951, FBI agents in New York separately detained Sax, then working as a taxi driver, and Hall on public streets, escorting them to field offices for questioning.[11] The interrogations, conducted amid the heightened anti-communist scrutiny of the McCarthy period, relied on Venona-derived intelligence shared covertly between agencies but withheld from the subjects to avoid compromising the program.[33] During his interview, Sax denied any knowledge of or participation in espionage, maintaining that he had no contacts with Soviet agents and attributing his Harvard-era association with Hall solely to academic friendship.[11] FBI tactics included confronting Sax with details from decrypted cables, such as references to material handoffs, but agents avoided revealing Venona's full scope, instead probing for inconsistencies in travel records and associations. Sax's responses remained consistent, emphasizing a lack of tangible proof beyond inference, and he refused to elaborate on potentially incriminating wartime activities without counsel.[34] Hall similarly denied involvement in parallel questioning, with both men's statements recorded but yielding no admissions under the era's investigative pressures.[35]Factors Enabling Non-Prosecution
The U.S. government's decision to withhold evidence from the Venona project—a top-secret code-breaking effort that decrypted Soviet communications identifying Saville Sax as a courier for atomic secrets—prevented its use in any potential prosecution, as revealing the program's existence would have compromised ongoing intelligence capabilities against the Soviets.[36][3] Venona decrypts, operational from 1943 to 1980, explicitly linked Sax to espionage activities alongside Theodore Hall but remained classified until 1995, depriving prosecutors of admissible proof in court during the 1950s when suspicions peaked.[37] This national security calculus prioritized long-term counterintelligence advantages over immediate legal action, as independent corroboration—such as witness testimony or physical documents—was absent, rendering cases against figures like Sax untenable under evidentiary standards.[38] Hall's cessation of espionage activities after World War II, coupled with his relocation to the United Kingdom in 1962, further diminished the perceived urgency for pursuit, as no ongoing threat materialized to justify aggressive measures despite FBI awareness.[36] During 1951 interrogations, both Hall and Sax maintained denials or evasive responses, providing no confessions that could substitute for Venona's inadmissible intercepts, which contrasted sharply with cases like Julius and Ethel Rosenberg's, where independent evidence from confessed spy Klaus Fuchs and David Greenglass enabled convictions in 1951.[38] Absent active operations or prosecutable admissions, the FBI concluded it lacked grounds for charges, reflecting a pragmatic assessment that prosecution risks outweighed benefits without risking source exposure.[36] Empirically, this resulted in no indictment for Sax despite probable cause from decrypted cables, underscoring how Venona's secrecy shielded numerous identified agents from the era's espionage trials, with declassification decades later confirming details but arriving too late for legal recourse.[3][37]Legacy and Assessments
Impact on Soviet Nuclear Program and Cold War Dynamics
The transmission of atomic secrets facilitated by Saville Sax, who acted as courier for Theodore Hall's intelligence from Los Alamos, provided the Soviet Union with detailed designs for the implosion mechanism essential to plutonium-based bombs. Hall's reports, relayed through Sax starting in late 1944, included specifications on explosive lenses and neutron initiator placement, enabling Soviet physicists to bypass independent development of these complex components for their RDS-1 device.[1][31] Declassified assessments indicate that such espionage contributions, including those from Hall, shortened the Soviet timeline for a functional bomb by at least 12 to 18 months, culminating in the Joe-1 test on August 29, 1949, four years after the U.S. Trinity test but years ahead of pre-war intelligence projections that estimated Soviet capability no earlier than 1952.[39][40] This erosion of the U.S. nuclear monopoly intensified Cold War escalation, as the Soviet acquisition of atomic weapons emboldened Joseph Stalin's expansionist strategies amid ongoing superpower rivalries. The 1949 test prompted U.S. President Harry Truman's public disclosure on September 23, shifting strategic doctrines toward rapid pursuit of thermonuclear weapons and expanding military budgets, while Soviet possession facilitated aggressive moves such as the June 1950 invasion of South Korea, where nuclear deterrence was implicitly invoked without de-escalatory restraint.[41][42] The resultant arms race entrenched mutual assured destruction paradigms by the mid-1950s, with both sides amassing stockpiles that heightened global flashpoint risks, including Berlin and Cuba, rather than stabilizing relations as some espionage apologists have claimed.[43] Empirical evidence from Soviet post-1949 conduct refutes notions that accelerated nuclear parity induced caution or altruism in Moscow's foreign policy; instead, the USSR leveraged its new capabilities to underwrite proxy conflicts and suppress Eastern Bloc uprisings, as seen in the 1953 East German revolt and sustained Korean Peninsula engagements, perpetuating ideological confrontation without moderation.[3][44]Ethical and Historical Controversies
Certain interpretations, particularly in sympathetic biographical accounts and documentaries like A Compassionate Spy (2023), portray Sax's facilitation of atomic secrets to the Soviet Union as an ethically motivated effort to counteract potential U.S. nuclear hegemony, arguing that exclusive American possession of the bomb risked aggressive use against the USSR post-World War II and that sharing technology would enforce mutual deterrence for global peace.[35] These views, often echoed in leftist historical narratives, emphasize ideological altruism over national loyalty, suggesting spies like Sax and Theodore Hall acted as inadvertent stabilizers in an emerging bipolar world.[4] Critics, drawing on declassified Venona decrypts that explicitly document Sax's role as a courier for Hall's transmissions under codenames like "Starboy" and "Youngster," contend that such actions constituted treasonous betrayal, undermining the Manhattan Project's secrecy protocols designed to deny the weapon to adversaries—including the Soviet Union, despite wartime alliance—and disregarding the immense allied sacrifices in developing the bomb to end the Axis threat.[5][45] This assistance accelerated the Soviet nuclear program by an estimated 6 months to 2 years, equipping a regime responsible for systematic atrocities with unprecedented destructive power sooner than independent research would have allowed.[46] The ethical calculus favoring espionage ignores the causal reality of Stalin's tyranny, which included the Holodomor-engineered famine (1932–1933, ~3.9 million excess deaths in Ukraine alone), the Great Purge (1936–1938, at least 681,692 executions), and the Gulag archipelago, peaking at 2.5 million inmates with ~1.6 million deaths from forced labor and starvation between 1930 and 1953.[47][48] By bolstering a genocidal state—evidenced by its pre-war invasions of Finland (1939) and complicity in Poland's partition (1939)—Sax's contributions empirically heightened global risks, as Soviet nuclear parity facilitated aggressive postures without full accountability, rather than fostering the "peace" invoked in post-hoc rationalizations.[13] Such defenses, prevalent in sources with systemic ideological biases, fail to grapple with the disproportionate harm inflicted on democratic principles and human lives through aid to totalitarianism.Family Reflections and Recent Revelations
Boria Sax, the elder son of Saville Sax, published the memoir Stealing Fire: Memoir of a Boyhood in the Shadow of Atomic Espionage in 2014, offering a personal account of the espionage's toll on family dynamics during his childhood and adolescence.[49] In the book, Sax depicts his father as a singular figure whose ideological commitments created emotional distance and secrecy within the household, contributing to a strained paternal relationship marked by absence and unspoken tensions rather than overt conflict.[15] This portrayal emphasizes the domestic repercussions, including the author's experiences of isolation and the indirect psychological weight of concealed activities, without seeking to mitigate the historical gravity of the espionage.[7] In a 2002 PBS NOVA interview, Boria Sax reflected on his father's upbringing in a tightly knit, Yiddish-speaking immigrant community in Boston, which fostered an insular worldview insulated from broader American norms and reinforcing commitments to leftist causes.[50] Sax recited one of his father's poems during the discussion, interpreting it as evidence of Saville's unyielding ideological stance, unaccompanied by remorse for actions undertaken in service of Soviet interests.[50] These familial insights, drawn from direct recollection, underscore Saville Sax's resolute character, as corroborated by contemporaries like Joan Hall, who described him as a "one-off" individual whose traits both enabled his role in sensitive transmissions and perpetuated personal detachment.[18] The 2023 documentary A Compassionate Spy, directed by Steve James, incorporates perspectives from Saville Sax's children, including Boria and daughter Sarah Sax, who articulate reservations about their father's facilitation of atomic intelligence transfers to the Soviet Union.[51] Boria Sax's contributions in the film reiterate misgivings rooted in the ethical implications of the espionage, prioritizing empirical acknowledgment of Venona-decoded cables identifying "Star" as Saville Sax over narratives of ideological justification or familial exoneration.[51] These modern disclosures, while intimate, align with declassified evidence confirming the transmissions' scope, reinforcing assessments of the activities' enduring consequences without introducing unsubstantiated redemptive elements.[5]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Venona:_FBI_Documents_of_Historic_Interest/Ladd_Memorandum_1951-02-28

