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Richard and Sorge
In October 1941, Ribbentrop ’ s prestige was badly damaged by the discovery of the Soviet spy ring in Tokyo headed by Richard Sorge, who was arrested by the Japanese while in bed with the wife of General Eugen Ott, the German Ambassador.
The first was ignored as a provocation, but the second, when confirmed by the Russo-German journalist and spy in Tokyo Richard Sorge, enabled Stalin to transport Siberian troops from the Far East in time for Georgy Zhukov to use them to save Moscow.
The NKVD received the same report from Richard Sorge, its spy in Tokyo, but with a most significant extra paragraph that Hitler might seek peace with the Soviet Union.
* 1944 – Soviet spy Richard Sorge, a half-Russian, half-German World War I veteran, is hanged by his Japanese captors along with 34 of his ring.
Spy Dr. Richard Sorge gave Stalin the exact German launch date ; Swedish cryptanalysts led by Arne Beurling also knew the date beforehand, but Sorge and other informers ( e. g. from Berlin Police dept.
* Operations of Richard Sorge, the " Red Orchestra ", Willi Lehmann, and other agents who provided valuable intelligence during World War II.
* Richard Sorge, Soviet spy codenamed Ramsay
Richard Sorge ( October 4, 1895 – November 7, 1944 ) was a German communist and spy who worked for the Soviet Union.
Richard Sorge in the 1940s.
He was the youngest of nine children of Wilhelm Richard Sorge ( d. 1907 ), a German mining engineer, and his Russian wife Nina Semionovna Kobieleva.
GDR postage stamp commemorating Richard Sorge
* Richard Sorge
Influential editorial writers of Asahi such as Shintarō Ryū, Hiroo Sassa, and Hotsumi Ozaki ( an informant for the famous spy Richard Sorge ) were the center members of the Shōwa Kenkyūkai, which was a political think tank for Konoe.
* Richard SorgeSoviet spy, reported from Japanese information the exact date that Operation Barbarossa would begin, and the fact that the Japanese would not attack Russia in 1941.
Richard Sorge -
The Allied spies were also incarcerated there, including Richard Sorge who was hanged in the prison on November 7, 1944.
From 1925 through 1945, over 70, 000 people were arrested under the provisions of the Public Security Preservation Law of 1925, but only about 10 % reached trial, and the death penalty was only imposed on two offenders, spy Richard Sorge and his informant Ozaki Hotsumi.
A scene in director Masahiro Shinoda ’ s Spy Sorge, a 2003 movie about Soviet spy Richard Sorge, was shot on the train for period effect.
He retired from directing after the release of Spy Sorge in 2003, a biopic on the life of Richard Sorge.
A scene from the 2003 movie " Spy Sorge " ( director Masahiro Shinoda ) about Richard Sorge was shot in the garden,

Richard and alerted
A huge rectangular grey-white pillar of rock was shown from the point of view of the camera looking up from its base, and then it dramatically crumbled and collapsed to the strains of a short segment of the Richard Strauss composition Also sprach Zarathustra, usually after being activated, alerted or meddled with by a living being such as an astronaut or extraterrestrial.
Security guard Richard Jewell discovered the bag and alerted Georgia Bureau of Investigation officers.
Frank Wills ( February 4, 1948 – September 27, 2000 ) was the security guard who alerted police to a possible break-in at the Watergate complex in Washington, D. C., which eventually led to the uncovering of the truth about the Watergate Scandal that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon.

Richard and Moscow
The treaty was signed in Moscow on May 26, 1972 by the President of the United States, Richard Nixon and the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Leonid Brezhnev ; and ratified by the US Senate on August 3, 1972.
* 1959 – At the opening of the American National Exhibition in Moscow, U. S. Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev have a " Kitchen Debate ".
* July 24 – At the opening of the American National Exhibition in Moscow, United States Vice President Richard Nixon and USSR Premier Nikita Khrushchev engage ine the " Kitchen Debate ".
** Richard Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev sign the SALT I treaty in Moscow, as well as the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and other agreements.
The founding director of CBS News, Paul White, for whom the top award given by the broadcast news directors organization Radio Television Digital News Association ( RTDNA ) is named, Kent Cooper, who later became the longtime GM of rival Associated Press, early ABC News president Elmer Lower, Raymond Clapper, originator of the term " smoked-filled room ", Merriman Smith, Helen Thomas, Marie Colvin, Martha Gellhorn, Kate Webb, Henry Tilton Gorrell, Seymour Hersh, Lucien Carr, Neil Sheehan, Brit Hume, Keith Olbermann, New York Times columnists Thomas Friedman and Gail Collins, Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen, sportswriter and Untouchables co-author Oscar Fraley, author H. Allen Smith, military author Joe Galloway, Saigon evacuation photographer Hubert van Es, photographer Stan Stearns, 1970s White House photographer David Hume Kennerly, White House spokesmen George Reedy, Ron Nessen and Larry Speakes, longtime Las Vegas bureau manager Myram Borders, onetime CIA Director Richard Helms, who interviewed Adolf Hitler for United Press during the 1936 Olympics, diplomat Edward M. Korry, former UP correspondent to Moscow Eugene Lyons, C-SPAN founder Brian Lamb, ex-Dow Jones CEO Les Hinton, 1980's-90's Singapore President Wee Kim Wee and novelists Allen Drury, Tony Hillerman and Daniel Silva.
The work was closely studied by Gustav Mahler and Richard Strauss and served as the foundation for a subsequent textbook by Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, who, as a music student, attended the concerts Berlioz conducted in Moscow and Saint Petersburg.
The opening has never been popular at the top level, though a number of prominent players have employed it on occasion ( for example, Richard Réti against Abraham Speijer in Scheveningen 1923 and Boris Spassky against Vasily Smyslov in the 1960 Moscow – Leningrad match ).
Further discussion brought the negotiations to an end on May 26, 1972, in Moscow when Richard Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev signed both the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and the Interim Agreement Between The United States of America and The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on Certain Measures With Respect to the Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms.
Kendall was well acquainted with Richard Nixon and was photographed with him as Vice President and with Nikita Khrushchev during Nixon's Moscow trip known for the Kitchen Debate.
In 1959 Richard Nixon, then Vice President, and Nikita Khrushchev held discussions at the Moscow Trade Fair, which became known as the “ Kitchen Debate ” because they were mostly held in the kitchen of a suburban model house.
Powell also announced that U. S. Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage would soon travel to Moscow for talks with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Vyacheslav Trubnikov about Afghanistan.
They asked participants to judge the likelihood of several outcomes of U. S. President Richard Nixon ’ s upcoming visit to Peking ( also known as Beijing ) and Moscow.
Kazan biographer Richard Schickel described Strasberg's first experiences to the " art " of acting: He dropped out of high school, worked in a shop that made hairpieces, drifted into the theater via a settlement house company and … had his life-shaping revelation when Stanislavski brought his Moscow Art Theatre to the United States in 1923.
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and United States Vice President Richard Nixon debate the merits of communism versus capitalism in a model American kitchen at the American National Exhibition in Moscow in July 1959.
The Kitchen Debate was a series of impromptu exchanges ( through interpreters ) between then U. S. Vice President Richard Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev at the opening of the American National Exhibition at Sokolniki Park in Moscow on July 24, 1959.
and in 1929, together with her colleague from Moscow Art Theatre Richard Boleslavsky, she founded the School of Dramatic Art in New York.
A similar famous Khrushchev phrase was made to the then U. S. Vice President Richard Nixon at an American technology exhibit in Moscow: " In 7 years we will reach the level of America.
In 1959, at the American National Exhibition in Moscow, U. S. Vice-President Richard Nixon declared the superiority of the capitalist system while standing in front of an example of a modern American kitchen.
George Zweig ( born on May 30, 1937 in Moscow, Russia into a Jewish family ) was originally trained as a particle physicist under Richard Feynman and later turned his attention to neurobiology.
* USSR, Russia, Moscow, Nikita Khrushchev and Richard Nixon, 1959-Powerful Cold War image in which Nixon is poking his index finger at Khrushchev's suit lapel.
Richard also made the 1980 U. S. Olympic team, but couldn't compete due to the U. S. A .' s boycott of the 1980 Moscow Olympic Games.
* Richard Chancellor's 1555 voyage to Moscow, and the return to Scotland and London are portrayed in Dorothy Dunnett's book The Ringed Castle.

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