THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, January 12, 1975 I TH ICIA DIY-udyJnur-2,17 1 1111111: MP -! __________ BOOKS A JUST VERDICT? The controversy: Four authors on the atomic bomb spy case 11 ON DOING TIME, by Morton nature was directed toward the Sobell. New York: Charles destruction of the American Scribners' Sons, 1974, 525 pages, way of life, the trial captured $10.95. societal anxieties of the era. INVITATION TO AN IN- The controversy over their INVITATIONWaltOan i I guilt or innocence did not end QUEST, by Walter and Miriam with the four-thousand volts ad- Schneir. Baltimore: Penguin ministered to Ethel and Julius Paperbacks, 1973, 487 pages, at Sing-Sing prison in 1953. So $3.50. hotly contested is the entire THE IMPLOSION CONSPIR- affair that even today, some ACY, by Louis Nizer. Green- twenty-four years after the wich, Conn: Fawcett Crest Rosenbergs and Sobell stood Paperbacks, 1973, 543 pages, trial, the FBI refuses to release $1.75. the entirety of their files. THE BOOK OF DANIEL, by RENEWED INTEREST, fuel- E. L. Doctorow. New York: ed by recent revelations of Signet Paperbacks, 1971, 319 illicit Government activity, hasr pages, $1.50. led to a whole spate of new books, exploring the Rosenberg- By DANIEL BORUS Sobell matter and the Govern- POLITICAL TRIALS present ment handling of the charges. a both a thorny problem and For the historian, the crux of a golden opportunity for Ameri- the matter is whether the evi- can historians. On one hand, deuce is enough to convict and they must distill established if not, as now seems clear, facts which legally convict the why this execution took place. defendants from entangling rhe- Long-forgotten co-defendant toric and passionate controver- Morton Sobell, who served 18 sy On the other; historian can years of a thirty year term for extract fertile clues to Ameri- his involvement in the "Rosen- can values, goals, beliefs, and berg spy ring," has just com- mores from the manner in pleted his account of his role which the cases are prosecuted, in On Doing Time. Partially a administered, and publicized. misnomer, Sobell's book deals Since the advent of the Cold not only with his life in prison, War, there have been a num- but his early life and political ber of these trials, pitting, for beliefs, his kidnapping in Mexi- the most part, the Left against co to stand trial with Julius and the concerted strength of the.......................... increasingly monolith i c and powerful Government. For the historia These cases are immediatej touchstones to those acquainted matter is whethe with recent history. In the last seven years, the Berrigans, the enough to con Vi Chicago Seven, Spock, Coffin, and Ellsberg have put not only now seems clear their alleged criminal behav- ior, but their political beliefs Lion took place. to court-room battle. Because of the magnitude of.....s a. :i .:.:::":.....::::. the alleged crime, the finality Ethel in New York, his incom- of the penalty, the hysteria of petent but well-meaning de- the press and public during the fense, and his sentencing. The early Fifties, and the advent book's value, though, lies in the of the Korean War, no political story and the description of a trial has had the devastating ef- man jailed for what he was- fect of the Julius and Ethel rather than for what he did. Rosenberg and Morton Sobell "atomic spy" case. !OBELL IS THE prototypical fy for the government in the "atom spy ring" case, was ar- raigned for conspiracy to com- mit espionage. The prosecution never charged Sobell with traf- ficking in illegal knowledge of the bomb, but they dil charge him with membership in the Rosenberg spy ring. By the laws of conspiracy, the acts of one are the acts of all; so Sobell was, by his association with Rosenberg, culpable for Rosen- berg's transgressions. FTHE IMPLICATIONS of the law and its use are obvious, given the government's position that membership in the Party automatically meant active work in behalf of the Soviets. It is, then, not a quantum leap to assume that any one who knew Julius and Ethel was fair game for indictment. Though Sobell is a man grie- vously wronged and entitled to damages from the govern- ment for his time behind bars, he takes a back seat to the central figures, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg. Their death and those who were responsible should occupy the center of our attention. Approached by Otto Premin- ger to do a film treatment of the case, famed attorney Louis Nizer set out to do the "defini- tive" statement on the trial. To i i i n, the crux of the :r the evidence is ct and if not, as , why this execu- this task he brought his liberal reputation, his love of law and reason and his quick mind. Sadly, the expectation for a dignified and just treatment of the case are not realized. DISDAINING the exacting evi- dence of Walter and Miri- am Schneir's Invitation to an Inquest or any other additional research beyond the trial tran- scripts, newspaper accounts of the p e r i o d and, strangely enough, E. L. Doctorow's fic- tional account The Book of Dan- iel, Nizer's Implosion Conspir- acy endorses the outcome of the trial. The book comes to this' conclusion from Nizer's basic' premise - that the Rosenbergs are guilty because the jury1 finds them so. He argues throughout the book that the relevant question is not whe- ther the Rosenberg's actually committed the acts of which SOME HAVE ARGUED that this is not a truly political case - that the charge has been f introduced by those who want to suggest a frame-up. But the facts seem to indicate other- wise. Since the prosecution ar- gued that the defendants were motivated by their ideological fanatacism which by its very player. Like the prosecutor Saypol, the presiding witnesses Elitcher and Greenglass, and Ethel and Julius, he's Jewish. Like Julius and Elitcher, he's an electrical engineer whose Com- munist views were molded at City College in the late Thirties. Though it is not a rigidly ana- lytical work, Sobell's work book does a creditable job in analyz- ing the weakness of Max Elit- cher's testimony against him, the timidity of his defense and the political nature of the law and terror invoked against him. Sobell, who had refused to yield to FBI demands to testi- they are charged, but whether the evidence as presented is enough to convict them. What is sacrosanct in our systemtof justice, he stresses, is the jury's decision as to who in a dispute is telling the truth. Now that the passions have subsided somewhat, that seems beside the point of historical in- quirv. It is not.hard to see why the jury, given the information they had, would believe the pro- secution witnesses. After all, neither Gold, who was serving his thirty years, or David Greenglass, who was sending his sister to the electric chair, seemed to have a reason to lie. Add this to the prevailing anti- Communist sentiment and fear, and the jury's decision is not difficult to explain. History is1 not served by simple regurgita- tion and lack of inquiry. Nizer tends to make assump- tions that are not justified, con- sidering America's recent ex-t perience. First, he states that the legal system, despite its ad- mitted faults, is sacred, and its aim for perfection excuses its excesses and mistakes. Nizer's conception of the legal system leaves no room for forged hotel' cards and government-induced perjured testimony, for preju- dicial environments in the court- room, and for prosecutors who engage in demagogic tactics.E Nizer believes in the liberal tra- dition; if it failed, it was through mistake, not design. NIZER MAINTAINS that the environment of hysteria surrounding the Rosenberg case, and others like it, did niot im- pede theadministration of jus- tice. His references to other events and inquiries are kept to a minimum. Nizer never ex- plores the sense of dread with which Americans regarded the Soviets, nor does he investigate the paranoiac climate of the McCarthy era. To Nizer, the post - war hysteria has been over-exaggerated; it can be dis- missed as a bad dream from which the country awoke with-I WAGEN WERKE V W tune-up $10 plus parts 8-6 Mon.-Fri. 1237 ROSEWOOD 662-2576 between S. Industrial & Packard ISRAELI DANCING Sunday, January 12 out having suffered lasting dam- age. Compounding these errors, Nizer proceeds to create emo- tional and personal livesnfor Ethel and Julius on the scant- iest of evidence. Since they took no money, Nizer needs to explain the motivation for their "crime." Agreeing with the prosecution, Nizer suggests their motive was ideological fa- naticism. To this end he cre- ates scenes and conversations which may or may not occur- red. To wit: "He (Julius) prop- agandized against National Bis- cuit Company cookies, products of Standard Oil Company, Gen- eral Motors and Dupont be- cause they were the result of labor exploitations. He adopted the whole lexicon of Commun- ist grievances, which offered the simplistic view that every injustice resulted from capital- ism and nothing else ... (Page 27.) The "source" for this char- acterization is not given, but a very similar passage appears in Doctorow's Book of Daniel on page 45. So deep was their fantacism, Nizer claims, that they ignored the welfare of their sons. "Lat- er, when her son Michael was two and one half years old, she took a course at the New School for Social Research in child rsychologv. This was an indi- rect revelation of the fact that even at that early age her son had shown neurotic tendencies. Somehow, the wholesome life which knits even underprivileg- ed families in love had failed her." (Page 274). His basis for such statements are unclear. WHILE IT IS fraudulent to pass off fiction as fact, fic- tion can provide a commentary on fact, rounding it out and ex- olaining the consequences of the act. Although it would be a grie- vous error to assume a total congruence between Doctorow's Book of Dniel and the Rosen- berg case, Daniel offers an ans- wer to what the case says about our society. To Doctorow, the trial is evidence of this soci- ety's need to find sacrificial lambs for its irrational and xenophobic fears.. Throughout the work, Doctorow raises is- sees which will continue to plague this society: the contin- ual triumph of might over vir- tue, the repressiveness of the government,, the covert anti- Semitism that helned bring the case to court, and the individ- irl's need to resolve the con- flicts and passions of the past before acting in the present. Given Doctorow's thesis on the self-destructive nature of the society, what course is left for the individual? Ethel puts it best in her final letter to her sons before her execution: "Eventually, you must come to believe that life is worth the living . . . Your lives must teach you, too, that good cannot really flourish in the midst of evil; that freedom and all the things that go to make up a truly satisfying and worthwhile life must sometimes be purchas- ed very dearly. WOMEN -K l 12-1 P.M. 1-2:30 P.M. Beginners Advanced BEET MI RASH Program in Judiac and Gebraic Studies-Winter 1975 COURSE OFFERINGS: in Hillel Social Hall 1429 Hill Street 663-3336 BEGINNERS HEBREW: a multi-media audiovisual approach to the teaching of language. INTERMEDIATE HEBREW HEBREW SPEAKING CLUB BASIC JUDAISM I: an introduction to Judaism and Jewish life for those with no Jewish background. BASIC JUDAISM 11: for those who wish to explore the basic principles of the Jewish religion. AMERICAN JEWISH LITERATURE: we will be reading and discussing in depth three.major American novels. JUDAISM AND CHRISTIANITY: this course will examine and compare classical Jewish and Christian views. MODERN JEWISH THOUGHT: Buber, Heschel, Rosenzweig, existentialism and the challenge of modernity. A STUDY OF THE BIBLE: a study of Biblical religion particularly as it relates to previous religions that surrounded it. HASSIDISM: Jewish mysticism in its mass revival of 18th and 19th Century Eastern Europe, prayer and song, dancin and swaying, ascent to the heights of the "Ein Sof." INTRODUCTION TO MIDRASH: we will discuss Midrash views of the story of the binding of Isaac, but also the nature and structure of Midrash. THE ARAB-ISRAELI CONFLICT: a study of source materials: this course will deal with the origins and develop- ment of the Arab-Israeli conflict and the emergence of the Palestinian national movement and the P.L.O. THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN JUDAISM TWO SPECIAL COURSES: SCHOOL OF EDUCATION "The Ethical Development of College Students"-G-350, Section 001 How does, could or should the University influence the ethical development of students? How does ethical growth take place? Does the University have an ethical viewpoint? A moral or political one? How have your values been affected by your col- lege education thus far? Instructor: JOHN ELLIS 764-9472 (office), 761 -7713 (home) TIME: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 4-5:30 p.m. 3 credits, Room 1309 SEB "Chicanos and U.S. Higher Education"-G-350, Section 002 Topics to be covered include: the current status of Chicanos in higher education, a Chicano view of higher education in the 1970's, Chicano studies in the University, the Chicano college as an alternative, the Chicano student, Chicano research in the University, and Michigan public higher education and the Chi- cano. I a.. TA DInCu P(C A ' 7K A C r'0 1, A C 71 I(. .L .a1