editors:. laura berman howard brick contributing editors: dan borus sundaiy magazine inside: page four-the controversy page five-the evidence page six-the bLhaklist r7 l d V Number 14 Page Three Januay r FEATUR 112, 1975 ES The The a Rosenbergs in retrospect: cloak and government By HOWARD BRICK FTER THE SOVIET UNION explod- ed its first atomic bomb in August 49, the United States went berserk. ot believing that the Soviet regime had fficient 'neans to develop the bomb its own, numerous government of- cials cried out that atomic secrets had een stolen from the United States. One oung congressman stood out in demand- ig action: "If the President says the merican people are entitled to know all ie facts, I feel the American people re also entitled to know the facts about ie espionage ring which was respon- ble for turning over information on the om bomb to agents of the Russian vernment." That man was Richard Nixon, an in- strumental figure in stirring up the na- tional frenzy that stultified political life in the 1950's. One of his statements or, the floor of the House of Representa- tives - made after his successful per- secution of Alger Hiss - is indicative of his attempt to breed widespread paranoia: "Five years ago, at the time of the Dumbarton Oaks Conferenze in 1944, when Alger Hiss served as director of our secretariat, the number of peo- ple in the world in the Soviet orbit was 180 million . . . in 1944, before Dum- barton Oaks, Teheran, Yalta, and Pots- dam the odds were nine to one in our favor. Today since those conferences, the odds are five to three against us." Be that as it may, by the end of 1949, the search for spies had begun. It end- ed with the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg on June 19, 1953, an episode that can be counted as one of the worst government crimes in the century. * *~ * IN THE LATE sixties, Robby Meeropol spent his summer days in Ann Arbor walking a friend's dog through the arb. Coming out of the Geddes gate, he would walk down to South University -"the strip" as he and his friends used to call it - and eat himself sick on a large Miller's ice cream cone of chocolate ice cream and a quart of Orange Julius. He used to eat Krazy Jim's Blimpyburg- ers, despite stories he had heard that they contained horsemeat, and when fall came, he looked forward to seeing Mich- igan football despite the deris.ve com- ments of his fellow SDS members. He was active politically, and his moment of stardom came when he created the slogan for SDS' campaign agaist class- ified war research in the fall of 1968: it was "Go, Michigan, Beat Thailand." It made a splash, he remembers; ever- body was wearing the button. But throughout this time, he never told anybody that he was Julius and Ethel Rosenberg's son. The name Meer- opol had come from the New York couple who had adopted him and his older brother Michael after the execu- tion. He had learned to keep his true identity under cover when he was young- er and was contented to keep if that way for many years. His anonymity ended in 1973 w h e n Louis Nizer published The Implosion Conspiracy, a book designed to com- memorate the twentieth anniversary of the Rosenberg execution. While opposed to the death penalty, the book agreed with the verdict of guilt and character- ized the Rosenbergs as political fana- tics who - if nothing else - were guilty of child neglect. The Meeropols revealed their identities for the first time since their adoption in order to bring suit against Nizer for invasion of privacy, defamation of character, and the use of their parents' prison letters without permission. The case is still pending. In the past year, a National Committee to Reopen the Rosenberg Case has been established, and the Meeropol sons have traveled across the country asserting their parents' inno- cence, helping to set up local com- mittees and appearing on radio and tele- vision talk shows. SEADING AN ANONYMOUS life for so many years must have been try- ing, but Robby tends to downplay his own hardships. "I think that, really, my parents and what happened to them in their own case is much more import- ant than Michael or I," he says. He is a 27-year-old man with bushy hair, heavy eyebrows over dark sunk- en eyes, and a thick mustache that ac- centuates a slightly protruding upper lip. He walks slowly, leisurely, barely swinging his arms, but when he s i t s down to talk, he talks rapidly and ex- citedly. The first thing he tels any interviewer is that he will not answer any questions regarding memories of his parents his childhood before, dor-- ing, or after the trial, or his psychologi- cal development. There are many rea- sons for this, he explains. First, he doesn't want public pity for him or his brother to divert attention from the facts of the Rosenberg case and its political ramifications. Second, such ma- terial is bound to play nn important part in the law suit against Louis Nizer and therefore should not be discussed beforehand. But also, a third reason is probably that he is shy and simply doesn't like living in the public eye. Cn .nknnnhnt icAn rcnt Iiraian dagger gone NEVERTHELESS, it was always clear to him that sometime in the future, he and Michael would come out into the open and try to clear their parents' names. "At Michigan, it was clear in my head that sooner or later, I was going to do it, I just didn't know when." After completing his masters degree and passing his prelims in cul- tural anthropology, Robby left Michi- gan in the fall of 1971, still known only as Meeropol to most of his acquaint- ances. He went back east, found a job teaching anthropology at a small college in Springfield, Massachusetts, where Michael taught economics, and lived there quietly until the Nizer book was published. He is still enrolled at Mich- igan, a doctoral student in absentia. * * * In February, 1950, a Britisn physicist who had worked on the Manhattan Pro- ject in Los Alamos, New Mexico, ad- mitted to British police that he had per- sonally given atomic secrets to Soviet agents in the United States. The man, Klaus Fuchs, was tried and convicted of espionage with no prosecution evidence other than his own confesion. The pre- cise nature of the material given to the Soviets was never disclosed. Im- mediately after Fuch's arest, however, Nixon called for "a full congressional in- vestigation . . . to find out who may have worked with Fuchs in this coun- try." Of course, FBI director J. Edgar Hoover also had his men working on the job, and within months, a spate of al- leged spies were arrested. On May 23, 1950, Harry Gold, the man alleged to be Fuch's American accom- plice was arrested in Philadelphia. He freely confessed to espionage and seem- ed the model of contrition. He instructed the court to appoint an attorney who would not impede his complete coopera- tion with the FBI. Less than a month later, a young ma- chinist named David Greenglass was arrested in New York, accused of giving ,atom bomb information to Gold while he was serving as a GI at Los Alamo. He was described in FBI press releases as a former member of the Young Communist League. On July 17, Julius Rosenberg, brother-in-law and former business partner of Greengl~ass, was ar- rested, charged with recruiting Green- glass for his spying job. THE FBI PRESS release on Rosenberg . stated that he had been removed from his job in the Army Signal Corps in early 1945 for suspicion of Commun- ist Party membership. Julius' wife Ethel, David Greenglass' sister, was arrested for participating in the espionage scheme on August 11. To complete the chain of arests, a friend of Julius', Morton Sobell, was arrested in Laredo, Texas on August 18. He had been ds- covered in Mexico and had been deport- ed, according to government sources. It was soon known that David Greenglass and his wife Ruth would be the chief government witnesses in the case. R OBBY WAS ONLY three years old at the time of his parents' arrest and six when they were electrocuted at Sing Sing prison. One famous photo has the two Rosenberg boys looking over a copy of the Daily News. The banner headline read "Spies Get 1 More Day," and Robby looked on with an innocent, un- comprehending gaze. Even now, when his bushy eyebrows are arched high up his forehead, his broad face shows a similar expression. But through t h e years he has come to understand what went on in the past. "I think they did some specific things," he says, "and this may be going out on a limb a little bit and theorizing, but, you know, I think it's no accident that they had a brother testifying against a sister - that was David Greenglass testify- ina against my mother and my father tale berserk formation is going to get to the FBT" There is no doubt that the trial was full of political overtones. In opening the case, chief prosecutor Irving Saypol stat- ed, "The evidence will show that the loyalty and allegiance of the Rosenbergs and Sobell were not to our country, but that it was to Communism, Communism in this country and Communism through- out the world." While the Posenbergs and Sobell refused to answer any ques- tions regarding Communist Party mem- bership, Julius and Ethel were contin- ually baited by both the prosecution and Judge Irving Kaufman for their political beliefs. WHEN DEFENSE ATTORNEY Manny Bloch asked Julius if he had ever tried to recruit Ann Sidorovich, a woman whose name was mentioned by the Greenglasses, for espionaga, Kaufman interjected, "Did you ever discuss with Ann Sidorovich the respective prefer- ences of economic systems between Rus- sia and the United States?" Later Say- pol badgered Julius on what newspapers he read. Saypol also submitted as evi- dence a nominating petition for a Com- of was doing this, the prosecutor (Irving Saypol), the judge (Irving Kaufmanj, who were Jewish, were put under pres- sures to prove the opposite - to prove that they were good Americans and this was not the case about Jews; so they were under pressure to he harsh and to be uncompromising and so the gov- ernment had it both ways. "They had Jews putting Jews in jail and giving them stronger sentences and at the same time they were identifying Jews with the international community. So they whipped the Jews into line and at the same time they propagated an anti-semitic myth. And again it was very effective." * * * The evidence itself is shoddy. Ruth Greenglass testified that Julius came to see her in her New York apartment in November 1944. He told her that David Greenglass was working on the atomic bomb project and that he wanted him to furnish information on the bomb for the Soviet Union. Later, while he was home on furlough, David testified. Julius cut one side of a jello box, gave one half of it to him and said a courier would meet him in New Mexico with the other half. On June 3, 1945, the Greenglasses said, a man, later identi- fied as Harry Gold came to their Al- buquerque apartment, presented half of the jello box side, and said "Julius sent me." Greenglass was working in a machine shop at the time on experiment- al "5high explosive lens molds" and he gave Gold diagrams of the molds. High explosive lenses were devices used in the implosion bomb dropped on Naga- saki. Months later, Greenglass said, he gave more sketches to Julius, includ- ing one showing the cross section of the bomb itself. Ethel allegedly typed up David's. explanatory notes. HARRY GOLD TESTIFIED at the trial that he had met the Green- glasses in Albuquerque on June 3, 194, saying "I come from Julius." He receiv- ed an envelope of material that he later gave to his Russian contact in New York, and gave the Greenglasses $500 for the information. Gold testified that he had never met Julius and had re- ceived his part of the jello box and his instructions from the Russian contact. Despite all this testimony, no real docu- mentary evidence of the crime was pre- sented at the trial. The diagrams intro- duced as prosecution exhibits were sup- posed replicas of the ones Greenglass had made six years before. He had drawn them in 1950 when under interro- gation by the FBI. The diagrams of the lens molds, though, are so rudimentary as to be almost useless, and when scien- tists examined the diagrams of the bomb's cross-section in the 1960's, they said it was incoreot and ambiguous. When Julius was first told about the jello box story, he reportedly laughed and called it "fantastic - something like kids hear over the television on the Lone Ranger program." At that time, however - when he was first being interrogated by the FBI - he did not know what an important part the story would play in the case against him. "THE GREENGLASSES perjured themselves," Robby says. He nev- er refers to David as "uncle" or Ruth as "aunt." "But I think. the Greenglasses, you know thev've nanid an awfuli mtro. AP Photo AP Photo Dear President Eisenhower, I saw on television on Monday Mr. Oatts is not in prison anymore be- cause the President of the country let him go. It said his wife wrote a let- ter to the President over there and she told why Mr. Qatis should be let go. I think it is a good thing to let him go home because I think prison is a very bad place for anybody to be. My mommy and daddy are in pri- son in New York. My brother is six years old, his name is Robby. He misses them very much and I miss them too. I got the idea to write you from Mr. Oatis on television. Please let my mommy and daddy go and not let anything happen to them. If they come home Robby and I will be very happy, we will thank you very much. Very truly yours, Michael Rosenberg When Robby Meeropol went to the University from fall 1967 to fall 1971, he never told anyone that he was the son of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Mike Castleman, a former SDS member now working at the Free People's Clinic, knew Meeropol for several years without knowing his true identity. But since 1971, he has found out that as many as half a dozen people in SDS knew at the time who Meeropol was. How? They had seen Meeropol's bedroom, where he had prints of the Picasso portraits of Ethel and Julius on the wall. They guessed the rest, but apparently didn't talk about it. munist Party candidate for New York city council which Ethel had signed in 1939. 11 HE RESULT (of the trial),' Robby says, "was to make people so scar- ed that they could not engage in or- ganized political activity. Also, picking out my parents who were very very or- dinary people (was significant). I've talked to so many people wha said they saw this as an attack on them as well, they saw Michael and I could be their children and they could have been Ethel and Julius and it could have just been switched, you know, it could have been them so easily. And the warning was clearly, 'You're next if you don't cool it,' and it was very effective." Also, one intriguing fact of the case is that all major participants, defend- ants, witnesses, prosecutors and judge, ma mes