Sunday, January 12; 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five TC-L. i The (Continued from Page 3) The terms, he notes, are ones that we are all familiar wth, because they are the same terms we heard throughout the entire Watergate affair. Mere, Robby is very intent on making his point. It is necessary to draw the links between the Ps- enberg case and what happened in Watergate, he says, for in 1931 one can find the bases of the "national security" argu- ment that allowed Nixon and his men to pursue their Watergate campaign. "You look at Nixon and you look at that whole crew. the whole mentality. rhev are peo- ple who were young, bright- eyed, eager, bushy-taile4 peple coming up in the fifties. That's where ..they got their brownie points, that's where they made it big. And their mentality is the same. The same old crew.' tHE IDEA that domestic rad- icals posed a very great threat to the life of the nation was planted firmly in the minds of Americans during the Rosen- berg trial. Once people accept- ed that argument, the govern- ment could - easily attack its political opponents, saying They endangered national security. And once that was allowed, the door was open to all sor's of secret government activity. The concept was fully alive n the Nixon administration, best Pe-~ presented perhaps in the am-' ous "enemies list." , "This whole thing," Robby points out, "is the heart of 'he domestic anti-commuaisll issue, and it's one thing that left- wingers have had a most difi- cult time overcoming in the last, twenty years. Now there's an opportunity to seize the time and say look, this whole idea of the Communist menace is : ust a myth. Domestic radials have been identified with foreign con- spirators and we find that at- titude in middle America. If we can defuse that myrh, we can begin to reach some of ?hose people." The time is crucial, he ex- plains. Now, after all the Water- gate disclosures, the American people are more wiliing than ever to believe that the go'- ernment is capable of perpetrat- ing vicious hoaxes. "jF WE WAITED until we were fifty, we could come out and without too much dif- ficulty probably get the public t see this (that the Rosanbergs wvre framed) but we're trying to do it before its political vali- dity, dies. I mean, then it would be a purely historical exercise and a purely family, persona1l exercise, which are not invalid, but we want to do more than that. We feel it is an ongoing political event and that's one of the reasons we feel it's very important to do it and to do it now." *. s The Rosenberg case if you look at it closely, is full of dirty tricks. Take for example, the hotel registration card. The day after Harry Gold compieied his testimony, the prosecution intro- duced a photostatic copy of a registration card from the Hilton Hotel in Albuquerque to prove that Gold was indeed there on June 3, 1945. Because it wvs one of the only pieces of docu- mentary evidence taken directly from the time of the comms- sion of the crime, it took on great importance. The prosecution also submit- ted a copy of the Greengiasses bank records to show .hat on June 4 Ruth deposited s4O0 of the $500 they had received from Gold. The prosecution claimed in its closing statement that "The veracity of David and Ruth Greenglass and of Harry Gold is established iy the doiu- mentary evidence and cannot be coptradicted." le then re- ferred specifically to the rngis- tration card and the bank re-, cords., THE AUTHORS of the most falily researched book on the case, .vitati1 to aI n- quest, looked closely at these two pieces of evidence. Upon questioning the former man- ager of the Albuquer ive iltton and numerous former hotel em- January 17-19 at POWER CENTER "A THING OF JOY."-Kerr N.Y Times PATRICIA MORISON in vidence: A eio box iind ignatu re due to the times in Whichi he } G , i I; 1 l 1, ,, i ! , was growing up, he hadihe oth- er in the realm of the New Left But the schism between the Old Left and the New Left was ones reason why the Rosenberg trial faded into the background and had such a small place in the New Left consciousness. "Peo- ple didn't relate to the Rosen- bergs as being part of the-r own left-wing activity," Robby notes, "They related to it as an- cient history. "We (in the New Left) pro- claimed our radicalism to the world," he says. "We didn't try ,to cover it up. I mean, the Left in the Fifties was tryiag toj show that, 'We're more i meri- can than you are' and thev did not fool anybody. One of the things that we said was, y"ab, this is where we are, we're dif- ferent, we've got an alternative, and not only are we d;i'erent but we're better." j OOKING BACK at 'he Posen- berg case now, it is ev to see that the defense made many crucial erros. Manny Bloch was intensely deoted to his clients' cause, bit 11 prer- iolis experience had beei in un-' ion law and he knew 'idle about trial law. Of course the Rosen- bergs never faulted him for it. "You read their lerlers,' Rob- by says, "and they thought Manny Bloch was the greatest lawyer in the world and die the'r greatest defense jo for them. They never doubted him; they never thought he male any mis- takes even to the lay da ' However, one of the key mis- takes he made was not to cross- examine Harry Gold, waose veracity is definitely quiestion- able. At a previous trial he ad- mitted that he had it times created fantasies for himself that become so involved he could find no way out of them. For years, he told friends and associates that he was married and had children when in fact, he had always been single. At the spy trial of Abraham Broth- man in November 1950, where p " st i t t t G c C< nr in e' f C t w Gold died in 1972, his last em- Russian agents at all. But Man- ployer characterized him as a ny Bloch didn't understa-' '10s. "gentle man who had difficulty Of course, it was a time of eparating fantasy from real- hysteria. The governmeat was ity." intent on finding a scapegoa:. Also, while Bloch did stress and most of the poouiauon he fact that there had been bit- backed it all the way. 011 the er business disagreements be- night of the execution, som- 400 ween the Rosenbergs and the people demonstrating for execu- Greenglasses in the mmnths pre-' tive clemency kept a vigil ini vious to the arrests (a po);.sible front of the White Hot e. A cause for lying), he faileJ o crowd of thousands jeered at probe deeply enough into the them from across the stree. At nature of the Greenglass testi- the stroke of eight, the designat- mony. Now it would seem that, ed time of execution, there n fact, no crime of es,_- ona e came from the crowd, aceerding ver took place - that it was all to the New York Heral Tri- abricated - out Bloch sincere- bone, "an outbreak of cheers y believed that Greenglass and and honking of automobile Gold were indeed spies. He on'y ried to prove that his clients were in fact not part f the 4 Greenglass-Gold scheme. horns: Passing motorists shout- ed jibes at the pickets. A SKED IF A better deease could have saved the 1Ves of his parents, Robby resj:ocded, 'No, I don't think so. a !ave to think it was the times that did it. Otherwise, we w,:-ij have to blame our fr ends and that would be too painful. Most of the factual material concerning the trial itself comes from Invitation to an Inquest, by Walter and Miriam Schneir, Penguin Books, 1973. AP Photo Defense attorney Manny Bloch leads Michael, 9, and Robby, 5, out of Sing Sing Prison in Ossining, New York, after a visit with their p arents in February, 1953, fours months before their execution. ployes, they found that in the summer of 1950 the F31 had unsupervised access to the hotel files for several days on end. The authors, Walter and Miriam Schneir, then obtained copies of the June registration card as well as a registra:i-m c a r d showing that Harry Gold had al- so stayed at the hotel in Sep- tember 1945. The latter card' had been mentioned in Gold's Philadelphia trial -he suppos- edly stayed there after one of his meetings with Klaus tuchs - but did not play a part in, the Rosenberg irial The sister out of the room and told told him, "David has an idea to make some money and take some things from the Army." Julius said he had advised against it. Later, while the Rosenberg defense was pursuing apoeals, new evidence. came to light. It seems David Greenglass w a s first visited by the FBI in Feb- ruary of 1950, when agents in-, quired whether he had posses- sion of any uranium samples taken from Los Alamos. * -, * had been strong in the Thirties and Forties, the Fifties const-' tuted a void in terms of left- wing politics. The Left v= as scared and beaten: the rem- nants found some sort of an un- comfortable home in the univer- sities and spent a good deal of their time trying to cover up their ideology and the-rizing rather than acting on no.Aibcal issues. When the New Left emerged in the early aid middle Sixties, the only thing they ivv of the Old Left were the in,-f- fectual ex-activists -f the Dif- ties. The two groups never mer- "THE PROBLEM was t an a t tie emperor had no cloth- es," Robby says. First of all, there in fact was no "secret" to the atomic bomib. As Philip Marr .son, one of the top physic- ists in the Manhattan Project, stated (n the PBS doc uiieamarx'. the oily secret was th It an atomic bomb ,ideed could work, and that secret was dividged over Japan. Once it w-is le i- ed that slch a bomb c l'l be s'lccs ful, Morrison poinr-J )it, any nation with sufficie-t scien- tific and technological rensi'zr - es conld perfect a bomb wTtho'l rn ttide help. S condlv, it is likely that Greenglass, never transferred any documenTs o Have a flair for If you are interest- ed in reviewing petrr, admusi or writing feature stories a b o u t the drama, dance, film arts: Contact Arts Miehigan Daily. " There IS : dff'erence!!! ; * PREPARE FOR: # over 35 years of experience # and success " " Small classes * ISAT Voluminous home GRE study materials : ATGSB constantly updated * " 111A Tape facilities for " " reviews of class * * lessons and for use * " of supplementary " " FLEX materials G Make ups for * EI'Cmissed lessons E 'CFMG f - SNAT'LMED DS: " THOUSANDS HAVE " RAISED THEIR SCORES * 0 " * wrie or can: " * (313) 354-0085 " " 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd. " Southfield, Mi. 48015 * K SEDUCATIONAL CENTER s Ba ss ,;, U S u i Schneirs submitted both These LAST SUMMER, Robby spent ged; in fact, they never re 0ly he was also used as a key cards to a handwriting special- one drizzly night lecturing got along. nrosecution witness, he said of ist along with writing .amples to a group of New Yorkers va- -his fantasies, "It is a wonder from the clerk who had presum- cationing on Fire Island. Most WHEN ROBBY entered c(1- steam didn't come jut of my ably signed both. The former of them had lived through the lege in 1965, he was :- an ears at times." According to the clerk was retired and living in trial and as a result they were awkward position: thrngn his Public Broadcasting dIxxmer- Florida at the time of tle a receptive audience. He listed family history, he had 'oe foot tarv, The Unquiet Death of Jul- Schneir's research. The writing all the major pieces 6f evi- in the world of the Old Left; ius and Ethel Rosenberg, w.en specialist made two astounding dence against his parents on a observations. First, he form of blackboard, and as he refuted the June card was different in each item, he crossed it off the CO-EDUCATIONAL many subtle ways fro-n the! list. The crowd was impressed, - form of the September card. and, one by onethey came up TAE KW ON D O Second, while the clerk's writ- to shake his hand when the pre- ing on the September cardt p- sentation was finished. "I just peared to be authenti:, t 1: e want to tell you that I think K A IR A T E writing on the June card did you're a very nice intelligent not match up with tha samples boy," one woman enthusiastical- submitted by the clerk. The ly said while she grabbed his Schneirs were convinced tney hand in both of hers. "I'm 'tst had found substantial eldence kvelling for your parents.' of FBI forgery. It was the kind of comment Also, the Schneirs obtained that would make Robby wince. all the 1945 bank records of the { He doesn't like personal- atten- Greenglasses and fo'mnd that tion or personal sympathy. "A they had deposited large lot of people have come up to amounts of money n various us and said, look oh you poorl banks regularly for several victims, victimized orphans of months before and after June the cold war. They point to our 4. Though the testimon! only parents and the rest of the pea- referred to one meeting between pie who lost their jobs, were Gold and the Greenglasses. this jailed, and they say, look at research proved that the June these victims. But the circle of 4 deposit was in no way unique. victims is a lot broader than Furthermore, the tot i deposits that. It was this type of show- made that year would seem to case trial that created the cli- ALL YEAR DAILY SCHEDULE be far above the Greenglasses' mate that allowed secrecy to HOURS:-weekdays 7-9 p.m. income. The Schneirs have sog I go on, which meant that if you HR : gested that the mones, includ- disagreed with an internation-? Saturday 8:30-10:00 am. ing that deposited o: June 4, al government policy you were ,p Monday & Wednesday-Ange School may have come from the sale of Ija subversive. It's that type of at yorner of South University and Oxford stolen Army materials on tne climate that allowed the war in Tuesdoy, Thursday, and Saturday- black market. Vietnam to go on for so long and Ei'F JULIUS GOT on the that allowed Watergate. And the Huron High stand at the trial, he result is that the true viet'nis, Master Yu 5th Degree Korean Black Belt denied ever trying to recruit aside from my parents, ended David Greenglass for espionage up being the Americans who FOR INFORMATION: 665-5555 purposes. He never cut a jello died in the battlefield of Viet- ' c7 A .ttj, ScF.t..::i ai. . s . Y a y N.m . 5 ,--: -ti ' I Post box and never told Davi someone would come t him in New Mexico. Hed member paying a visit toI New York apartment inl ary 1945. Julius said at th that Ruth had sent her y d that nam, being the peoples of those to see countries, and also eventually did re- all of us, as the ripples contin- Ruth's ue to spread." 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