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Richard Brody (August 7, 2023). ""Oppenheimer" Is Ultimately a History Channel Movie with Fancy Editing". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on August 4, 2023. Retrieved August 7, 2023. simple, fact-heavy article [...] turns out to offer more complexity and more enticing detail than Nolan's script does. And it has more to say about the movie's essential themes—the ironies and perils that arise when science, ambition, and political power mix—than the movie itself does.
I removed details of her death[1] footnoted to what appears to be a small-town newspaper. I don't believe that is adequate sourcing even if the details were supported by the source, and they do not. I'm finding websites here and there making that contention, regarding how she was dogged by her father's security clearance denial, quite possibly using Wikipedia as a source; the wording is the same. One [2] saying it was "likely" that was the reason. The FBI does not disclose why it denies security clearances. Perhaps the reason was the emotional instability that led to her suicide? Was her FBI file subsequently released to the public? That seems to be the only way to know why her security clearance was not granted, if indeed it was denied or even required in the first place. I don't understand frankly why the United Nations, a non-U.S. institution, would require a U.S. security clearance for a translator. I think we need better sourcing than what appears to be speculation, especially since this is a somewhat exceptional and rather dubious claim. Figureofnine (talk • contribs) 13:26, 22 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I was able to access relevant information in American Prometheus on Google Books, p. 590, but p. 591, which details the suicide, is not online. If anyone has the book proper, perhaps they can reconfirm the details of the suicide. Figureofnine (talk • contribs) 14:14, 22 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I have a copy. It used to be available on Internet Archive. I have tweaked the article slightly to match the source. It reads on p. 590:
The FBI opened a full field investigation—and dredged up all the old charges about her father. In what must have been a painful and ironic blow to a tender ego, the security clearance never came through.
On p. 684, we have the source for this, which is cited as Oppenheimer's file, Section 59, "Letter to Newark", 22/12/69. I checked the file though [3] and this is not listed in the index. None of the letters are available online. Hawkeye7(discuss)19:47, 22 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]
But clearly, she still had issues with her parents. For a time, she saw a psychiatrist in St. Thomas, and she told her friend Inga Hiilivirta that this experience had helped her to understand “her resentment toward her parents from the way she had been treated as a young child.” She suffered from fits of depression. One day, determined to drown herself, she started swimming out from Hawksnest Bay toward Carval Rock, where Robert’s ashes rested on the sea bottom in an urn. She swam for a long time straight out across the ocean—and then, as she later confided to a friend—she suddenly felt better and turned back to shore.
On a Sunday afternoon in January 1977, she hanged herself in the beach cottage Robert had built on Hawksnest Bay. Her suicide was clearly premeditated. On her bed Toni had left a $10,000 bond and a will deeding the house to “the people of St. John.” She was beloved throughout the island. “Everybody loved her,” Barlas said, “but she didn’t know that.” Hundreds came to the funeral—so many, in fact, that scores had to stand outside the small church in Cruz Bay.
There's an excellent piece in the Times about whether Oppenheimer was a Communist party member. It's largely spurred by a new article in the Journal of Cold War Studies with contributions from four historians. I don't have the time myself, but it should probably be incorporated to ensure comprehensiveness. Cheers, ~ HAL33320:02, 9 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]