This book describes how the growing awareness of the strategic
importance of science in the 1930s caused the Allied and German
leadership to build scientific information supply systems that
survived into the postwar era. Using archival materials from five
countries, Richards traces the successes and failures of these
early scientific intelligence agencies. She focuses on the OSS unit
supplying copy for the US government's wartime program to reprint
current German scientific journals. She describes as well the
methods used by the OSS to spirit individual journal issues from
inside the Reich to microfilm squads on Germany's periphery, and
gives special attention to the Allied quest for information about
the mythical German atomic bomb. Richards also describes the supply
system set up by the Nazi government, and how its increasing
desperation for Allied scientific news led in the last year of the
war to a submarine landing of Abwehr agents on the U.S. coast to
microfilm periodicals at the New York Public Library. The final
chapter of her book looks at how the wartime experience with
scientific information influenced postwar patterns of scientific
documentation and librarianship in each country.
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