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Clip and Mail J RAUL Tt Tt) f re “3 Re tee % de ie ® 2 me % : on > Protesting the French’ government’s policy of armed repression in $ i strators paraded through the streets of Tunis carrying signs demanding, “Franeé | home.” A national strike was called to pro‘est violation of Tunisjan borders’ by French based in Algeria. FBI pressure campaign was aimel, at influencing Sobell decision _ One of the most amazing pressure campaigns by the department of justice i774) legal history paid off when the Supreme Court denied one o for review of his sentence. Sobell is serving 30 years in Alcatraz for alleged “conspi¥® with the executed Ethel and Julius Rosenberg to pass U.S. atomic secrets to the Soviet © When the court convened for .its current session on October 7 the Sobell petition was before it. While the just- ices were supposed to be weighing the merits of the ap- peal, the justice “ department slipped its thick thumb on the scales of justice three times in quick succession. The first time was on Oct- ober 12 when former U.S. at- torney Myles J. Lane “re-} called” that the Rosenbergs were supposed to have given the - Soviet Union information on an early earth satellite pro- gram in the U.S. Lane “recalled” testimony by David Greenglass, brother of Ethel Rosenberg, in 1951, to this effect. Greenglass’ testi- mony sent his sister and her husband to the electric chair. (He got off with 15 years for his cooperation with the just- ice department). On October 15, with the Su- preme Court’s decision due to be. handed down, the justice department struck twice. On that day Look maga- zine hit the newsstands with along article by Bill David- son, which purported to tell “the first real story of the big atomic bomb plot” and ‘The People Who Stole It From Us.” Fhe article was a justice de- partment “plant.” The ma- * ant, terial was supplied by the just- ice department, and there is no reason to doubt the timing was dictated by the depart- ment. The magazine stated that former Attorney General Her- bert J. Brownell, in December of last year, ordered his assist- William F. Tomkins, to prepare a full report on the Rosenberg case, based in part upon “previously unreleased facts.” An eight-month investigation followed, which resulted in preparation of such a report which, the article states, will be released to the public. The magazine ‘was given access to the extensive data that went~into the govern- “ ment report of which this article is an exclusive pre- view.” In a teaser over the article, Look said: “Many think they were framed (the Rosenbergs and Sobell), but a special U.S. report shows positively how these Americans gave’ Russia the A-bomb.” On the same day, testifying in New York’s Federal Court, a self-confessed former Soviet “spy” (Reino MHayhanen), stated that on two occasions (in. 1955 and -1956) he had been “ordered” to arrange for the payment of $5,000 to f Morton Sobell’s three petit {\ WASHINGT, Mrs. Helen Sobell, wife of young scientist imprison’ Alcatraz. at Mrs. -Sobell was to b@ | cruited” as a Soviet 9, Hayhanen said, and thé fendant in the case, M4 Ivanovich Abel (subseq¥® | convicted) ordered Hayh® to approach Mrs. Sobell. Abel was charged PY: government with hbein® oo head of a Soviet spy ner t in the U.S. Hayhanen_ fied he had not appro# Mrs. Sobell or paid he? thing, but the headline’ the job. : Fi The following day the cf mittee to Secure Justit® Morton Sobell blasted ri hanen’s. testimony an@ attorne? William F. 4 y kins (who conducted thé i amination of the alleged pe defector) in these words ‘ }° “As has happened $9 jf/” in. the past, ‘new’ reve" jl” about Morton Sobell 2%, jj Rosenbergs are ‘divuls® jj) Attorney General prow? office whenever Sobell® qj” comes up in the courts intent of these ‘revels which need no'proof oF oration, since they ane aired in newspapers, 5 clearly. to intiuente z opinion and the court Sobell.” November 8, 1957 — PACIFIC TRIBUNE