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If a case can be made that Felix Bloch engaged in espionage activities for the Soviet Union, the United States government must prosecute him.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: The Felix Bloch Affair: Assessing The Damage To US Security
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The most significant work was done by Eugene Wigner (who came from Hungary), George Gamow (Russia), Felix Bloch (Switzerland), Hans Bethe (Germany), Edward Teller (Hungary), and Victor Weisskopf (Austria).
FORBES: A Veterans Day Story: Immigrants and the Atomic Bomb
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In addition, four of the nuclear scientists who came to the United States from Europe in the 1930s later received a Nobel Prize for physics: Felix Bloch, born in Switzerland, won it in 1952, Emilio Segre (Italy) won in 1959, and Maria Mayer (Poland) and Eugene Wigner (Hungary) won the award in 1963.
FORBES: A Veterans Day Story: Immigrants and the Atomic Bomb
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On the basis of currently available public information, it is not possible to determine the validity of the allegation that a senior foreign service officer named Felix S. Bloch has been spying for the Soviet Union for many years.
CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: The Felix Bloch Affair: Assessing The Damage To US Security