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New York Times (Free subscription) | 26/09/2008
... Friday by the National Archives, Gold said that when he met Julius Rosenberg’s brother-in-law, David Greenglass, an Army machinist who was working on the atomic bomb at Los Alamos, N.M., Gold introduced himself by saying: “I bring greetings from Ben in Brooklyn.” At the trial, Gold would recall that he greeted Greenglass by stating: “I come from Julius.”Gold also said the notes...
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PR News Wire (Free subscription) | 25/09/2008
... government witness in the trial of Ethel and Julius
Rosenberg. His confession led to the arrest of David Greenglass. His
testimony resulted in the arrest, trial and execution of Ethel and Julius
Rosenberg. Gold received a 30-year sentence in 1951. He was paroled in May,
1966, after serving just over half of his sentence.
This transcript was inadvertently left out of the group of...
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Ed Driscoll.com (Free subscription) | 23/09/2008
... himself as a Soviet partisan fighting behind enemy lines on behalf of Soviet Communism. He was, as David Greenglass put it to me, a "soldier for Stalin." Julius and Ethel Rosenberg and their recruits, including Morton Sobell, wanted to do anything necessary for the Soviet cause, before, during and after the war against Hitler. When it came down to it, they were first and foremost...
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New York Times (Free subscription) | 19/09/2008
He never told me about anything else that he was engaged in. Some readers of your articles might assume that I was corroborating the government’s charge about the alleged espionage of David Greenglass — that I was implying that Julius had told me of his other activities. He never did.
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History News Network (Free subscription) | 15/09/2008
... and Judge Irving Kaufman that Ethel, in typing information given to her by her brother-in-law, David Greenglass, to be transmitted to the Soviets, had betrayed her country'The documents include the grand jury testimony of Ethel Rosenberg's sister-in-law, Ruth Greenglass, in which she describes, writing in her own longhand, the information her husband obtained at the Los Alamos...
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i On Global Trends (Free subscription) | 12/09/2008
Ruth Greenglass Testimony Directly Contradicts Central Trial Charge against Ethel Rosenberg. Grand Jury Records Describe Greenglass Handwriting, not Ethel Typing, But Prosecutors Said Ethel “struck the keys, blow by blow, against her own country” The Julius and Ethel Rosenberg grand jury transcripts released as the result of legal action by the National Security Archive and a coalition...
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New York Post (Free subscription) | 12/09/2008
... trial, the key testimony against Ethel Rosenberg came from her brother and sister-in-law, David and Ruth Greenglass. They testified that Ethel Rosenberg had typed stolen atomic secrets from notes provided by David Greenglass. The testimony provided the direct involvement the jury needed to convict and that the judge in the case needed to sentence Ethel Rosenberg to death....
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Israelated (Free subscription) | 13/09/2008
... bomb details that the government said were passed along to Julius Rosenberg by Ethel’s brother, David Greenglass, were of little value to the Soviets, except to corroborate what they had already gleaned from other moles. This is how Sobell put it in the actual interview: “He was a spy, but no more than I was,” Sobell replied. “He gave nothing, in the end it was nothing. The sketch...
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Denver Post (Free subscription) | 12/09/2008
... trial, the key testimony against Ethel Rosenberg came from her brother and sister-in-law, David and Ruth Greenglass. They testified that Ethel Rosenberg had typed stolen atomic secrets from notes provided by David Greenglass. The testimony provided the direct involvement the jury needed to convict and that the judge in the case needed to sentence Ethel Rosenberg to death....
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kansascity.com (Free subscription) | 12/09/2008
... trial, the key testimony against Ethel Rosenberg came from her brother and sister-in-law, David and Ruth Greenglass.
They testified that Ethel Rosenberg had typed stolen atomic secrets from notes provided by David Greenglass. The testimony provided the direct involvement the jury needed to convict and that the judge in the case needed to sentence Ethel Rosenberg...
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Detroit Free Press (Free subscription) | 11/09/2008
... trial, the key testimony against Ethel Rosenberg came from her brother and sister-in-law, David and Ruth Greenglass.They testified that Ethel Rosenberg had typed stolen atomic secrets from notes provided by David Greenglass. The testimony provided the direct involvement the jury needed to convict and that the judge in the case needed to sentence Ethel Rosenberg to death.In...
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Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Free subscription) | 11/09/2008
... trial, the key testimony against Ethel Rosenberg came from her brother and sister-in-law, David and Ruth Greenglass.They testified that Ethel Rosenberg had typed stolen atomic secrets from notes provided by David Greenglass. The testimony provided the direct involvement the jury needed to convict and that the judge in the case needed to sentence Ethel Rosenberg to death.In...
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Seattle Times (Free subscription) | 11/09/2008
... trial, the key testimony against Ethel Rosenberg came from her brother and sister-in-law, David and Ruth Greenglass.They testified that Ethel Rosenberg had typed stolen atomic secrets from notes provided by David Greenglass. The testimony provided the direct involvement the jury needed to convict and that the judge in the case needed to sentence Ethel Rosenberg to death.In...
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Raw Story (Free subscription) | 13/09/2008
... key piece of testimony during the trial was given by Ethel Rosenberg's brother and sister in law, David and Ruth Greenglass, who claimed Ethel had typed up nuclear secrets stolen by David Greenglass from the Los Alamos nuclear weapons laboratory.This meant Ethel Rosenberg had direct involvement in the atomic espionage plot.However, transcripts of grand jury testimony...
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Star Tribune (Free subscription) | 12/09/2008
At the Rosenbergs' trial, the Greenglasses testified that Ethel Rosenberg had typed stolen atomic secrets from notes provided by David Greenglass. The testimony provided the direct involvement the jury needed to convict Ethel Rosenberg and that the judge in the case needed to sentence her to death.