"After the war, Bethe went back to Cornell, where he helped build an outstanding research center in high-energy physics. Peierls returned to Birmingham, where he created the outstanding school of theoretical physics in Western Europe. The two physicists established a pipeline between the two institutions and offered their generous evaluations of the young postdocs and colleagues—Hugh McManus, Edwin Salpeter, Stuart Butler, Richard Dalitz, Freeman Dyson, and others—that they sent to one another. Their correspondence likewise gives perceptive overviews of advances in high-energy physics, especially of the progress made after 1955 in the nuclear many-body problem on which Bethe was concentrating. Their letters also concern policy challenges posed by, for example, the cold war, nuclear weaponry, nuclear test ban treaties, and antiballistic missiles."
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Academics from GermanyPhysicists from the United KingdomUniversity of Cambridge facultyPhysicists from GermanyJews from Germany
Original Language: English
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Silvan S. Schweber, (p. 53) Note: The original source has the misspelling "Steward Bulter" instead of the correct "Stuart Butler". Hugh McManus (1918–2018), who died at age 99, specialized in high energy physics and was for many years a professor at Michigan State University. (See ) He was elected in 1964 a Fellow of the American Physical Society.
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Rudolf Peierls
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