As D-Day drew near, Gen. George C. Marshall, the Army chief of staff, dispatched a messenger to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in ...
Patrick: In 1942, the United States initiated its biological warfare program with a commission ... "Our so-called top secret program was an open book, including large-scale field testing." ...
Mr. DeMille had a cheery disposition that could mask his talent at concocting horrifying — and frequently riveting — ...
Powerful new models, combined with novel lab tools, could make it much easier to develop killer viruses. The world should ...
Jay Stratton's memoir promises to reveal "shocking discoveries, challenges and breakthroughs" in the government's research on ...
A recent study by a Japanese scholar has shed new light on exposing the horrific crimes of human experiments committed by ...
Son of a noted painter who had illustrated books by Charles Dickens ... Fildes would later claim he participated in another biological warfare project that did go forward, however: the May ...
The suspect in what the FBI called an "attempted assassination" of former President Trump suggested Iran should feel "free to ...
Children get all kinds of books from their parents while growing up. But a book mine gave me when I was around 10 years old would have a significant impact on my life — even if I didn’t realize it at ...
Remains of a Maryland aviator, lost on a terrifying mission over Germany during WWII, have just been identified.
As D-Day drew near, Gen. George C. Marshall, the Army chief of staff, dispatched a messenger to Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in London. Eisenhower was instructed to meet alone with the messenger, a mere ...
John von Neumann — mathematician, physicist and participant in the Manhattan Project — said: “For progress, there is no cure.