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  1. William Liscum Borden (February 6, 1920 – October 8, 1985) was an American lawyer and congressional staffer. As executive director of the United States Congress Joint Committee on Atomic Energy from 1949 to 1953, he became one of the most powerful people advocating for nuclear weapons development in the United States government.

  2. Jul 24, 2023 · William Borden is a pilot and a nuclear strategist who accuses Robert Oppenheimer of being a Soviet spy in the film Oppenheimer. He is based on a real person who advocated for the development and use of nuclear weapons and hydrogen bombs.

  3. The papers of William L. Borden, a former staff director of the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, include a memoir, an essay, and FBI memos. He wrote a letter to J. Edgar Hoover identifying J. Robert Oppenheimer as a possible threat to the nation.

  4. Jul 8, 2018 · Learn how a young heir to a fortune gave up his life to be a missionary and inspired thousands of others to do the same. Read about his statements of conviction and how God used his death to do greater things.

  5. Aug 14, 2023 · Although William Liscum Borden (1920-1985) was not a part of the Manhattan Project during World War II, he became a powerful influence on its successor, the Atomic Energy Commission. He graduated from Yale in 1942 and enlisted as a bomber pilot.

  6. William Liscum Borden's There Will Be No Time: The Revolution in Strategy (New York, The Macmillan Company, 1946; xiii, 225 pp. $2.50) con- siders more than the atomic bomb, however, and discusses the broader subject of the manner in which modern war challenges most of the. political preconceptions of our day and age. The mechanization of.

  7. William Liscum Borden (1920 – October 8, 1985) was an American lawyer. As executive director of the United States Congress Joint Committee on Atomic Energy from 1949 to 1953, he became one of the most powerful people advocating for nuclear weapons development in the United States government.