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32
“An invention is the result”: Quoted in Berle and De Camp (1937), 4.
33
“An invention is not complete”: Quoted in ibid.
34
“The invention is not the specimen”: Ibid., 197.
35
“It seems that Hedy”: George Antheil draft text, 11–12. Antheil Papers.

EIGHT: FLASHES OF GENIUS

  1
“We are, at this instant”: Antheil to Bullitt, 16 Oct. 1940, MS 112, box 3, folder 42, William C. Bullitt Papers, Yale University Library.
  2
“split-second”: “Idea for a Radio-Controlled Torpedo,” 2, 23 Dec. 1940, document in possession of Anthony Loder, Los Angeles.
  3
“In the meantime”: Antheil to Lamarr, 10 Jan. 1941, Antheil Papers.
  4
Oslo Report: See Frithjof Sterrenburg,
The Oslo Report 1939—Nazi Secret Weapons Forfeited
.
  5
“was to handle”: Antheil to Lamarr, 10 Jan. 1941, box 2, folder 7, George Antheil Papers, Columbia University Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
  6
“I found it necessary”: Ibid.
  7
“is a queer girl”: Antheil to Bullitt, 20 May 1941, MS 112, box 3, folder 42, Bullitt Papers.
  8
“Idea for a Radio-Controlled Torpedo”: Document dated 23 Dec. 1940, in possession of Anthony Loder, Los Angeles.
  9
“made blueprints”: Antheil to Bullitt, 20 May 1941.
10
“One of the imperative”: Scott (1920), 286–87.
11
October 1915: Ibid., 13.
12
“mentally inbred”: Quoted in McBride (1992), 7.
13
more than 110,000 ideas and inventions: Ibid., 12.
14
only one actually went into production: Scott (1920), 125.
15
testing pilots for airsickness: National Inventors Council (1943), 387.
16
“Several others”: Scott (1920), 124.
17
“had more impact”: Quoted in Michael Bess, review of
Something New Under the Sun: An Environmental History of the Twentieth-Century World by
J. R. McNeill,
Journal of Political Ecology
9 (2002).
18
“Inventors often lost”: National Inventors Council (1943).
19
“And now we’ve received”: Antheil to Bullitt, 20 May 1941.
20
“Hedy is incredibly”: Ibid.
21
“deeply interested”: Antheil to Bullitt, n.d. (“Thanks for your very kind note of February 22 [1942].…”), MS 112, box 3, folder 44, Bullitt Papers.
22
“became her trademark”: Barton (2010), 102.
23
she briefed him: Ibid., 103.
24
legally changed her name: Ibid., 108.
25
“Langner seems to be”: Antheil to Bullitt, 30 June 1941, MS 112, box 3, folder 42, Bullitt Papers.

NINE: RED-HOT APPARATUS

  1
“We are, at present”: George Antheil et al., “Idea for a Radio-Controlled Torpedo,” 23 Dec. 1940, document in possession of Anthony Loder, Los Angeles.
  2
“two sister system[s]”: document in possession of Anthony Loder, Los Angeles.
  3
“(a) The ribbon wavelength”: Ibid.
  4
“It’s my daily work”: Antheil to Bullitt, 24 June 1942, MS 112, box 3, folder 44, William C. Bullitt Papers, Yale University Library.
  5
“Hedy was once married”: Antheil to Bullitt, 20 May 1941, MS 112, box 3, folder 42, Bullitt Papers.
  6
“novel torpedo”: Ibid.
  7
“It is of course”: Markey and Antheil (1941), 12–13.
  8
“Recent communications”: Antheil to Bullitt, 30 June 1941, MS 112, box 3, folder 42, Bullitt Papers.
  9
illness ran into the layoff: Shearer (2010), 130–31.
10
“Hedy was here Sunday”: Antheil to Bullitt, 19 July 1941, MS 112, box 3, folder 42, Bullitt Papers.
11
“At that time”: Boski Antheil memoir, 93–94, box 17, folders 1–3, Antheil Collection.
12
“Hollywood is a funny”: Ibid.
13
“Let’s move away”: Antheil (1945), 335.
14
“We moved to a tiny”: Boski Antheil memoir, 94.
15
“We got the smallest”: Antheil (1945), 336.
16
“It was from my dead”: Ibid.
17
“I have just finished”: Antheil to Bullitt, 19 July 1941.
18
“HEDY LAMARR INVENTOR”:
New York Times
, 1 Oct. 1941.
19
“actually reached”: Antheil to Bullitt, 13 July 1942, MS 112, box 3, folder 44, Bullitt Papers.
20
“The Ambassador said”: U.S. Department of State (1943), 136.
21
“When that big bomb”: Mullener (2002), 31.
22
“U.S. submariners began”: Wildenberg and Polmar (2010), 102.
23
These and other problems: See Gannon (1996), Newpower (2006), and Lockwood (1951).
24
“After considering our torpedo”: Antheil to Bullitt, 5 Feb. 1942 (misdated 1941), MS 112, box 3, folder 44, Bullitt Papers.
25
“Hedy and I spent”: Antheil to Bullitt, 13 July 1942.
26
“unquestionably dealt”: Kennan, introduction to Bullitt (1972), xii.
27
“I am sorry”: Bullitt to Antheil, 25 Aug. 1942, box 28, folder 16, Antheil Collection.
28
“during the anxious days”: Antheil to Bullitt, 23 May 1943, MS 112, box 3, folder 44, Bullitt Papers.
29
“rebirth”: Quoted in Whitesitt (1983), 57.
30
news analyst: Ibid., 58.
31
“chip in and help”: “Hedy Lamarr Sells $4,547,000 Bonds,”
New York Times
, 2 Sept. 1942.
32
“NEWARK, N.J., Sept. 4”: “Hedy Lamarr a Hit in Newark,”
New York Times
, 5 Sept. 1942.

TEN: O PIONEERS!

  1
denied its identifying information: “It is only this year (1997) that the connection has been pointed out by Dave Hughes.” Scibor-Marchocki (2003), “Sonobuoy.”
  2
“When we received”: Ibid.
  3
“As requested”: Ibid.
  4
“In retrospect”: Ibid.
  5
“worked very well”: Ibid.
  6
“solves each”: Ibid.
  7
“spread spectrum”: Scholtz (1982), 832.
  8
paper published in 1982: Ibid.
  9
told me he was aware: Robert Scholtz, personal communication, 28 April 2011.
10
follow-up paper: Price (1983).
11
“Although the radio link”: Scholtz (1982), 829.
12
seminal paper: Shannon (1948).
13
“Shannon’s formula”: Walters (2005), 165.
14
coined the term “bit”: Shannon (1948), 379.
15
“evidently carried”: Scholtz (1982), 833.
16
different secret communication systems: Ibid., 845–47.
17
“scores of patents”: Ibid., 835.
18
“For the first time”: Scibor-Marchocki (2003), “Surveillance Drone.”
19
top four most performed: Whitesitt (1983), 62.
20
“It is a wonderful”: Quoted in ibid.
21
“There is everything”: Quoted in ibid.
22
“became a shuttle trip”: Lamarr (1966), 129.
23
Traumas emerged: Ibid., 128–30.
24
“time and analysis” … “the crisp, competitive”: Ibid., 131.
25
“It was the case”: Ibid., 137.
26
“My judgment on scripts”: Ibid., 166.
27
“We argued quite a bit”: Quoted in ibid., 181.
28
$30 million or more from acting: Ibid., 312.
29
Spread Spectrum Systems:
Dixon (1984).
30
“first comprehensive”: Mike Marcus, “Early Civil Spread Spectrum History,”
http://www.marcus-spectrum.com/SSHistory.htm
, 1.
31
“anachronistic technical regulations”: Marcus (2009), 19.
32
“In the 1970
S”:
Ibid., 20–21.
33
study the FCC commissioned: Scales (1980).
34
“Spread spectrum techniques”: Ibid., 1–3.
35
“It became clear”: Marcus (2009), 24.
36
“the spread spectrum Pandora’s box”: Ibid.
37
not so easily persuaded: This discussion follows ibid., 26.
38
“Legend has it”: Ibid., 25.
39
“The rules adopted”: Ibid., 33.
40
A study done for Microsoft: Perspective Associates (UK) (2009),
Economic Value of Unlicensed Spectrum
.
http://www.marcus-spectrum.com/SSHistory.htm
.
41
“I can’t understand”: Meeks (1990), 2, 4.
42
“Few people were ever”: Osborne (2000).
43
“I wasn’t worried”: Dave Hughes interview with author, Colorado Springs, 23 Sept. 2010. All Dave Hughes quotations from this source.

AFTERWORD

  1
“Some time ago”: Boski Antheil, “Past Present,” box 17, folders 1–3, Antheil Collection, Library of Congress.
  2
“To neutralize Mandl”: Newton (1986), 544.
  3
“Hedy’s fondness”: Barton (2010), 227.
  4
“living a very private”: Carter (2009), 116.
References
Abelson, Hal, Ken Ledeen, and Harry Lewis. 2008.
Blown to Bits: Your Life, Liberty, and Happiness After the Digital Explosion
. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Addison-Wesley.
Adrian. 1938. “Clothes.” In
Behind the Screen: How Films Are Made
, edited by Stephen Watts. London: Arthur Barker.
Antheil, George. 1916. “The Madman’s Narrative.”
www.antheil.org
.
——. 1924. “Manifest der Musico-Mechanico.”
De Stijl
6:99–102.
——. 1925a. “My Ballet Mécanique.”
De Stijl 6
:141–44.
——. 1925b. “My Ballet Mécanique: What It Means.”
Der Querschnitt
, Sept.
——. 1935. “Composers in Movieland.”
Modern Music
12 (2): 62–68.
——. 1936a. “Glands on a Hobby Horse.”
Esquire
, April, 47, 174, 176,178.
——. 1936b. “Glandbook for the Questing Male.”
Esquire
, May, 40–41,184.
——. 1936c. “Know Thyself.”
Esquire
, July, 34, 192–95.
——. 1936d. “So Smells Defeat.”
Esquire
, Nov., 52–53, 227–28.
——. 1937a.
Every Man His Own Detective: A Study of Glandular Criminology
. New York: Stackpole Sons.
——. 1937b. “Hollywood and the New Music.”
Cinema Arts
, July,28–29.
——. 1938. “George Gershwin.” In
George Gershwin
, edited by MerleArmitage. New York: Longmans, Green.
[——]. 1940.
The Shape of the War to Come
. New York: Longmans, Green.
——. 1945.
Bad Boy of Music
. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran.
——. 2000.
Antheil Plays Antheil: The SPA Recordings & Private AudioDocuments, 1942–1958
. San Francisco: Other Minds. Two compact discs.
Baker, Sarah. 2009.
Lucky Stars: Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell
. Albany, Ga.: BearManor Media.
Barton, Ruth. 2010.
Hedy Lamarr: The Most Beautiful Woman in Film
. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky.
Beach, Sylvia. 1991.
Shakespeare and Company
. New ed. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
Berle, Alf K., and L. Sprague De Camp. 1937.
Inventions and Their Management
. Scranton, Pa.: International Textbook Company.
Bollinger, Martin J. 2010.
Warriors and Wizards: The Development and Defeat of Radio-Controlled Glide Bombs of the Third Reich
. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press.
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