rosenberg
rosenberg
    
      In 1950, the Federal Bureau of Investigation arrested Julius
     Rosenberg (1918-53), an electrical engineer who had worked
     (1940-45) for the U.S. army signal corps, and his wife Ethel
     (1916-53); they were indicted for conspiracy to transmit
     classified military information to the Soviet Union. In the trial
     that followed (Mar., 1951), the government charged that in
     1944 and 1945 the Rosenbergs had persuaded Ethel's
     brother, David Greenglass-an employee at the Los Alamos
     atomic bomb project-to provide them and a 
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trial. The case aroused much
     controversy. Many claimed that the political climate made a fair
     trial impossible and that the only seriously incriminating
     evidence had come from a confessed spy; others questioned
     the value of the information transmitted to the Soviet Union and
     argued that the death penalty was too severe. Communists in
     the United States and abroad organized a campaign to save
     the Rosenbergs and received the support of many liberals and
     religious leaders.

