Found 707 results

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(exhales sharply) Theory will take you only so far. - BETHE: Mm. - CHEVALIER: Hello! - BARBARA: Hello, you. - KITTY: Hi. BARBARA: We missed him. You want to adopt? - She's kidding. - (Kitty chuckles) We wanted to see you before we left. - For parts unknown. - (chuckles) CHEVALIER: You know who I ran into the other day? Eltenton. ROBERT: Oh. The chemist from Shell? The union guy? CHEVALIER: Yeah. He... The, uh, F.A.E.C.T. guy. He was moaning about how we're handling the war. ROBERT: How so? Lack of cooperation with our allies. Apparently our government's not sharing any research with the Russians. Well, he said, "Most scientists think the policy is stupid." (suspenseful music playing) - ROBERT: Oh, yeah? - CHEVALIER: Yeah. He mentioned that if anyone had anything they wanted to pass on, uh, going around official channels, that he could help.

Oppenheimer

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Density increases. Correct. Increasing gravity. Increasing density. - And? - It's a vicious cycle until... what's the limit here?

Oppenheimer

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It's not that simple, Hoke. MAN: Chevalier, good to see you. It's... Ah, Barbara, good to see you and the illustrious Dr. Oppenheimer. I'm Eltenton. - ROBERT: Oh, pleasure. - Please, please. Now, might you say a word about organized labor on campuses, yes? Coming through! Coming through! - (chanting): F.A.E.C.T.! - I work at Shell. We've signed up chemists, we've signed up engineers, so why not scientists in academia? (chanting): Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! - Oppie! Oppie! Oppie! - (cheers and applause)

Oppenheimer

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Richard, you tell Ruth I'll be down to Pasadena Thursday.

Oppenheimer

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During the Battle of Britain, I found myself increasingly out of sympathy with the (clears throat) policy of neutrality that Communists advocated. Right after Hitler invaded Russia and we became allies, these Communist sympathies, did they return? No.

Oppenheimer

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Eat.

Oppenheimer

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Robert. I want you to meet Chevalier. Dr. Haakon Chevalier, Dr. Robert Oppenheimer. - Pleasure. - Pleasure. This is my little brother, Frank. - And this is... - Hello. - Still Jackie. - Hello, Still Jackie. Chevalier, you're in languages? And your reputation precedes you. - What have you heard? - MARY: Excuse me. That you're teaching a radical new approach to physics I have no chance of understanding, but I hadn't heard you're a Party member. - Uh, I'm not. - Oh, not yet. Frank and I are thinking of joining. Just the other day, - I was saying... - I support a range of causes. CHEVALIER: The Spanish Civil War? A democratic republic being overthrown by fascist thugs, who wouldn't? Our government. They think that socialism is a bigger threat than fascism. ROBERT: Not for long. Look at what the Nazis are doing to the Jews. I send funds to colleagues in Germany to emigrate. I have to do something. (sighs) My own work is so abstract. What are you working on? What happens to the stars when they die. Do stars die? Well, if they do, they'd cool, then collapse. In fact, the bigger the star, - the more violent its demise. - (explosions) The gravity gets so concentrated it swallows everything. Everything, even light. Can that really happen? The math says it can. If we can get published, then perhaps one day, an astronomer finds one. But right now, all I have is theory, which can't impact people's lives. Well, if you're going to send money to Spain, do it through the Communist Party. They can get it to the front lines. Mary sent me with these.

Oppenheimer

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You went back the next morning. I did, I had to, really.

Oppenheimer

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SERBER: Donald, would you like to contribute here? Please, help me out. HORNIG: You're on your own, pal. Bob, I'm not quitting my job because plutonium is radioactive. We just don't know what it might do to the female reproductive system... Your reproductive system is more exposed than mine, presumably. Can we please? The implosion device is nowhere. Hey, you can't rush everything. - Oppie, please. - Well, there's rushing and there's getting on with it, so pick one. Wait. Neddermeyer's doing his job. Teller's not helping. You're not helping. I've been asking for calculations on the implosion lenses for weeks. The British can do it. Fuchs. Absolutely. It's your job, Teller. I'm engaged in research. On a hydrogen bomb we're not even building. (others laughing)

Oppenheimer

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September. July. That's the sweet spot, gentlemen. August. July. Test in July. But I need my brother. (thrilling music continues)

Oppenheimer

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(Kitty breathing heavily) You don't get to commit the sin and then have us all feel sorry for you that it had consequences. (breath shuddering)

Oppenheimer

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(rocket engine rumbling) (stomping intensifying) (stomping stops)

Oppenheimer

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Germany is about to surrender. (applause) It's no longer the enemy who are the greatest threat to mankind, it's our work. (people murmur)

Oppenheimer

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(stomping stops)

Oppenheimer

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I'm sorry, Oppie, but there's a call.

Oppenheimer

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ROBERT: Progress? Two years and a billion dollars' worth? Well, hard to put a price on it. Not really, just add up the bills. "Rural free deliveries." Eighty babies delivered the first year. This year, we've had ten a month. Birth control is a little out of my jurisdiction, General.

Oppenheimer

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BOHR: The British pilots put me in the bomb bay. Showed me the-the oxygen, you know, - but I messed it up. - (crowd laughs) Uh, when they opened me up in Scotland, I was unconscious. But I pretended I'd been napping. (crowd laughing) Please enjoy your party. (light applause) (whispering): Is it big enough? To end the war? To end all war.

Oppenheimer

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Oppie, I don't think you want to go up against Strauss. If we both speak, they listen to me. When you speak, they hear a prophet. When Strauss speaks, they hear themselves. They'll listen to a prophet. A prophet can't be wrong. Not once. SENATOR McGEE: Didn't you accuse Oppenheimer of sabotaging the development of the Super? I was never one of those to bandy around terms like "sabotage." SENATOR McGEE: But Mr. Borden was? As I understand it, possibly. How was Mr. Borden able to put together such a detailed indictment? He was no longer a government employee, yet he appears to have had unlimited access to Dr. Oppenheimer's file. Might Mr. Nichols have given him access to the file? Or someone else, at the AEC? That's a very serious accusation, Senator. Is it your intention to suggest that Dr. Oppenheimer is disloyal to the United States? I've always assumed, and still assume, that he's loyal to the United States. I believe this. And I shall believe it until I see very conclusive proof to the opposite. ROBB: Do you or do you not believe that Dr. Oppenheimer is a security risk?

Oppenheimer