Evidence (short story)

He began the story at Camp Lee in January, finished it in April in Honolulu while waiting to go to Operation Crossroads, and sold it to editor John W. Campbell that month.[1] His wife, Gertrude Blugerman, advised him to hold out for more money, but neither of them considered option payments which could be renewed every several years, allowing the movie rights to relapse if Welles took no action.His opponent Francis Quinn's political machine claims that the real Stephen Byerley was permanently disfigured and crippled by the accident.Quinn attempts to take clandestine X-ray photographs, but Byerley wears a device which fogs the camera; he says that he is upholding his civil rights, as he would do for others if he is elected.During a globally broadcast speech to a hostile audience, a heckler climbs onto the stage and challenges Byerley to hit him in the face.
Short storyIsaac AsimovScience fictionAstounding Science FictionStreet & SmithRobot seriesEscape!The Evitable ConflictI, RobotThe Complete RobotRobot VisionsUnited States ArmyCamp LeeOperation CrossroadsJohn W. CampbellOrson Wellesfilm rightspolitical machineU.S. Robots and Mechanical Menpositronicsmear campaignAlfred LanningSusan CalvinRobopsychologistThree Laws of Roboticsdeath penaltyInternet Speculative Fiction DatabaseInternet ArchiveFoundation SeriesRobbieRunaroundReasonCatch That RabbitLittle Lost RobotA Boy's Best FriendSomedayPoint of ViewThink!True LoveRobot AL-76 Goes AstrayVictory UnintentionalStranger in ParadiseLight VerseSegregationistLet's Get TogetherMirror ImageThe Tercentenary IncidentFirst LawSatisfaction GuaranteedGalley SlaveFeminine Intuition. . . That Thou Art Mindful of HimThe Bicentennial Man