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1e Washm gton Post Times Herald ---_...______he w&Bl'llIIgLDl'l Dally News he Fvemng Star lashrngtonl LI-larly Newshe Sunday StarNewlwashmgtonl York! --_.___*__.%r_ lnday News NewYork? ______ewYork Post ---______w he New York Trmes -_-_.%___ LL] he Sun Balumore!---_._.____ he Dally World---¢.______< 1e New Leader --_.._____ 1e Wall Street Joumal ___.___

, . 1e Natronal Observer -_.._____ -I ople'sWorld -~-______zammer Waamngton!--______I-IE SU

______a.te LONDON, ENGLAND

I u 451-4 20 1+-H e_ N29 1939 ofif >= 1j6.m~ 92l;!_;§E 27 1959 ~ 5 L%[792l!§ _7-6I?J5E_§__i. ---- -._. ______H. ' '-__ [1 *' »'-' _=II|- *' ""l"-;3'~ K-r "~-"""'*§="-""'~§-- '~- '».-W '-"';E,92-{J-. 4» '92 -0- -.5 l "~,,,,'-~*""e-'="-'" -- em J;_ l l .,_._;~r E. y ' 92~..,__r 'Q an -,¢~_»:_" ee.~;.. re; T» ll'l*f'92§"L";'Q"'A'-5iC:,;Jg3,£:l: ye . _ .U_. 7._____ 5- E; "1, J. - Na ~w a__:4-'~ .. !"9292 Mohr BishOD Casper __.__._._.____ Cull Conrad 92 Feltuhun -_.__..__. I Gale Rosen .-_._-__...__.__ » Sullivan --__.._'.._._

TeleTavel _..__._-_.__.__ Trotter -._._._._._..__ Holmes. Room Gcrndy

I r | .-

Times Herald The Wash in gton Post

The Sunday Washington Star Daily Ha News _.____ The Evening Star Washington!._____ sh in gtnn! ___ New Daily York News Post New York! ______Sunday News New York! Baltimore! The New Daily York WorldTimes The New Leader

_.__.-..-._-.____ People's The Wall WorldStreet Journal The National Observer _._._._.._..__._r

Examiner Washington! __.._.___*____, ILHE §Lll92lDAX__EXPRESS 1 ' I LONDON; *E192f<:TrIu»rD Dam J ameny 12! _ 1969 4 ' ' .

*'%'M§l,lnda _In llvloscowl . Iirlliellsl'rho"'-ifolrrth I wife _ 5 _9'_ * _' ofKim i Philby, '- the' Secret _ Service as-y-"-_-q 1 $3re-~~>~¢:¢:'='~'§.-:».:~»:»-:>-»-',,»'.:..r;....*-r$.*~.I . I ~~ - - ~ -' ' ." -- 5.:

.. 2* ~ I-" .» M4.-E,*.-*~. - '=_ -f .¥*92-.9-'~"*- -. -~r . =- =1?» r:~ - . P '-- .- 92 - as .-.~=-.l.?.'-.-.=e.-:¢.'..- _-.1 .;r.._» .. L. O!. . -. '*| .. _..,,_ _ _'_ Mohr ---_.__.__._._ ._THE TWO_American0 Bishop sisters, Melinda and Casper Harriet Marling. had a corner table under Callahan the amber- awning of the Café de"Flore on Conrad ----___.__.. iliat evening in Paris Felt __.-...______,_ 31 summers ago. Gale --__._...______, Two young Englishmen, R0 sen Mark Culme-Seymour, on Sullivan holiday from London, Tove] staying with his friend Trotter --.___..____. Donald Duart Maclean, Tole. Room newly appointed Third 8 Secretary at the British-Ind Fiat roi-cee have Ahmed-.-rheihree MI-IllI1881FJ.*.loL'a::dHolmes Embassy; caught their eye. l she r sranze was horn iuihanu in éhlcszo literi on'l_ Gondy _...... __..___, Within minute: they were July 25, 1916. Her lather: {orb . talking tolether as thoughbears were English; her their motherhack to New York, mother: sncestors came from and lived with her and their they had known each other France. stepfather in III expensive for years. It was a scene no Her tether, Prsncis Herber apartment oi! Filth Avenue. doubt repeated ii thousandMarling, was the advertisinz In New York Melinda. enrolled times that summer in 1 manager or the Pure Oil Com- It SPQHOE 5cliO0l, I. fl.ll'll'on- thousand different cafes. But £1:-nil; Her mother. alter whom - lble establishment, but she this meeting was to possess el do was named, had clog-ednever shone at academic work. s peculiar signicance all wlth him at the age oi 20. '1 e,v l.i'ld disliked the discipline Ind its. own. " » r married in New York and concentration it involved. She moved to Chicogo where. two- left school early. although her ears after, Melinda was burr?sisters stayed on and later went to university. 7 Vivac-io_us'§4re_hl92b1einrlgigmha!i1 au r. a. er ne; her an 5;Ogl1W0 Culme - Seymour pi-ere:-red{£38155 alter Catherine. the third.At her mother: insistence amen; he thought she was Melinde. ca_tion.5wrotefor jobs, buout man: up afterli- ie zayer, more vivacious wiri- arrict initial interviews she showed Mn.cl6aI1._ Bit. 2ln.. with dark little interest in actually nding Wavy hair, more like an actor The Marilnga were comfort-one. She did start a secre- |Jl3YlflQ' the Dart or the youngably oi! and proud ot beinqtarial course. but ieri. halfway d1Dl0m_at than the young diplo- listed in the Chicaim toole- through to work briey in the mat himselr, was a-ctraoted in regisier. But behind their book section or Macy's. the Melinda. tacade of money and some ore- New York department store. Thai: night he saw her home.oeoupation with their SOCIBJ "PX? "B13118 tho! had. dinner gosition, iriction grew betweenShe spent s. lot of time read- T-0Bether. Soon they seemedrennin and his wire. This ing romances and filllp mags- lnseoai-able. i':uln_1i.nated in divorce when zinee filled with arg'er-i.hs.n- Mcllndl married the youngMelinda was 12, and in the Ilfe storied 0! Hollywood lm diplomat. She bore him three Inilowlng October Mrs. Marlin: stars. On her twenty-rst birth- The Washington Post children. Two Fears after he took her three dauzh-tern to dav she inherited some Times Herald had ed to Russia because his Bwitrerlnnd. money oi her om end so 1.-as Brvm-llrrv was about to be The girls attended La Peraiile independent or her mother for The Washington Daily News-_-_.i_ I:-irhosed. lhe joined him in Schoolin Vevey, near Lausanne. the rst time._ Moscow. And there she even- The head mistress held such Melinda decided to visit Parie, The Evening Star Washington!.._._ tuailv married another British warm memories or them that and sailed to France in 1938. The Sunday Star Washington!___..__ traitor. Kim Philhy. when Donald Maclean de- She told her mother that she What sort of woman is eamned she wrote to their would learn French, and then Daily News New York! Melinda. vi-hp married two or mother recalling Melinda l.| s take e Borbonne course in Y-111-5 wwitrws most damrerousmost lovable character." French literature and Artistic Sunday News NewYork! Russian soles, who "denied her Mrs. Mai-ling left her appreciation, both esoteric sub- New York Post children the chance or tree- daukhters there es boarder; Jects that eppealed to her dgg 3' What is her backs:-roundwhen she returned to the zlaghely ca on t?.l1l8tC, ook. slightly . imprac-The New York Times --_._._.__.___ United States to marry s In Paris. aha lived at rst The Sim ¬Baltimore! __._._..______lawyer, Hal Dunbar. éiter 5 with s French family. had a tew more H eraille. mild love affair with the son or The Daily World---_-_-_.___._..__ -- _ ___ _-__ _r-.l:I_-__:-'-'_fThe New Leader The Wall Street Journal -.._._.-.._.-.___ The National Observer ._._____._.__ Peopl e's World Examiner Washington! $_ . i LONDON, ENGLAND Date ,4%g

i lo " _}M__.F._-_ _:-J. "3 92.h __ _ I_~_.d92. __ ' 7;- e; LL Frit _'~'* . .§_ "hr-re; *1 -il-- _-:1 ='- 7 3 " qs;%.LJ92f*;~¢_h 3:, §~uI:F!e,.¬-_r92¬Jy..,rI.92""92>, ;,1i....e;»i-.%,,.r_,__;___;_,,.'¬:§,., s-,5... . h§~*l .- "I92f""""'I'- _. 1 ' ,, - '5. .1 -51" - "~'..i_ A-,4-.r.':$ _ I. ---, X F7 . T -. l 1 uououch ---_-__._. MOh1'-*1-''--Ii-- Bishop-----__._ Cos per Cciilol-ion Cont od ------_._ Felt Gale Rosen he house and lrlduslly ore end more time Sullivan ------_._ fsrllz cafes. where writers Tcvei -------_ rid ould-be drink. writers and g!-htfcdBeen Trotter nd drinking. Also. sh meet men and women whe Tele. Room actually taken some part Ino Spanish .0ivll War. then as Holmes much 1 focus oi Left-wing Gondy -----_ ilnerestbls ere no Vietnam doubt that istodayshe enloyed their stories. whether real or imagined. They were an extension or her reading: sh lived their adventures vicariously and without or dis- eom!-cl-t. danger Melindn was pretty. with e good gure. a small oval lace nnd large dark eyes. she had Donald Mlcleln with I friend's ehlld. His own three child wh 2.smrjhablt some 01 repeatlniherseli.round c arming Ind lrigenuous, and others In have all grown up in Moscow. , irritation Puritan ntmosphere. He nu After s few months with the educated at Greshs.m's School.Merlin: returned to the United A Igrtencitihone er family. to I the room movled n. gute Holt. and later. st Cambridge,?ta.t§e. but lgslinde stayed on Hotel Mont-bill. near the cm where he took rst - class n a w re. mm from do Flore. honours in Frencli and German.BIICKOIE-7' and lome Sh-ortaku He joined the Foreizn Otcs and restriction; llie rannlned and nnoi-erect marked for I- much one same. t I Why C lreat Caren. Then suddenly. e.ft-er rnontl-n Jter tho wsr. when the Two aws marred his charac-or stalemate and etairnatlon. the stentlallst cult blossomed,ter. Neither were iriunedieteljrGerman advance accelerated. tn bar in this hotel. with the nnnsrentl and. judging from and every day the war sin-Red Ca é de Flore and Lhe Café des his promotion. seemingly not nearer 50 the capital. All Amen- Deux Magots. became very can citizene were urired to popular with tourists. But was immediately at latent. iii-ioortan.i. non-ioseirual, One. andhe return to the States. 'Ihi.'. was when Melinda moved there two. he drank heavily. then the moment when Maclean rst. this narrow. S13-store}-edbecame abusive end liked to prnnosed to Melinda Marlin!- 'Ihe' Washington P08!- hotel powderedwith paint. c shabby:urging lino andthe break things. to hit people. The She felt attered. but she Times Herald equivalent oi 55. n. night tor two aws were not unconnected.realised tlmt Maclean was really bed and Continental breakfast. At school he had been nick- two men-and was she genuinely The Washington Daily NBWB-_-_-.i seemed 9. strange choice for an named "Ladv Maclea.n," and in love with either ? She wanted American heiress. There were debs at dances would remarktime .0metre up her mind, end The Evening Star Washington!._____ other hotels that were almostacldtlv on the ienumne Way in also her mother; advice. The Sunday Star Washington!---.-_ which he walked. An one girl she therefore told Donald equally cheap end Ir: more Daiiy News New York! lees-a.nt. sold ifueliy: He's got hip; llet sh}:ult. per ape CGi.il92"§1 5 e not coul i. ri lzim.it Pma Melinda deliberatelylilgelka lrirl." h over back in New York and le Sunday News New Yorkl choose the Montana because it e many snot er It war him know 7 was so olose.to the Cale do with his genes Donald Maeieen New York Post Flore where she had seen tried to conceal n losing battle Macleetn minted Out that th Donald Maclean spend so manyby blaster. He sought releasewould be imoorsible. Once The New York Times --_._.__..__H evenings, and she was anxiousin wild parties Ind punch-ups.had left Europe she oou to meet him? But at 10 the next morning.probably not return until ti The Sun Baltimore! ---_._.._.___ Onhr Melinda can lay. But scented. bathed. shaved. his long war was over. and no one could outwardly there was not.l-linghair immaculately brushed, he even guess when that miirht be. The Daily World------?..-..-. surorisinz in her esir with would be at his desk, in every The British Eznbassy was The New Leader Macleon. -- outward inch e. diplomat-or an evacue.tin¥ to Tours. and nctor playing e diplomat; part. June 10. 940. was the last day The Wail Street Journal Tall. debonair, sophisticated Melinda. Whose rather pro- when the safety of loreignerl Maclenn the best looked tvoe the or part youngof vincial interpretation oi could be guaranteed. Maclean The National Observer ----__-._._ E£l"!l5-:'"uii'i."' Bohemian life win limited to organised e. oer with diplomatic ills lather. Blr Donald. a smoking Havana cigars in number plates tor Gunne- People's World Bublic. oouid not understandBeymour to drive some Ameri- Examiner Washington! e e. cw year ear er. e onalds behaviour. Sh ha cans to Bordeaux. while he é<131"g16l' tCablnetdMlni]ster, éigdnever met anyone e d boy had been brought up in a before. like him ¬ran§ed H138 1'to drive Melinda THE SUNQAY EXPRESS house of strict discioiine and But in the exciting urlency of 'Loiiooiij When I'lI_ -.--'E-*-es. Harrietthis time. with the enemy at the D... January ~'i.iii92lo 77 , 1-.959

_ .. .. - ___. _ ,' ._ 'z " ' "**'* *7; *7 7 '77 ._ 7 7 7 7- ~34 1,7 _ _. * '_ * 1*. ;;"." ,.-'i=.;_ _-*.I§=e'_;.;*1~ .- -=--'i~- ~ -- . ~.r"92- - ~.__.- ~ +??»~..TT7- . " '92- -Ii {$7 7171:uh; ¢~ ." 7 "v1,_"7""7 "7-:7 *7-L 7 .-.Z* ' .15»:*92-1' l 7 l .- venue,and tire monotony 01' an empty. llmlesii llie. Instead she decided to marry Donald and. onthe eveoi the em.-us- tion she wrote to her other :- §;T "Darilng mother. Please don'tteal hurt tho: DeLodch -_.______1 haven: let you knowberore I ""'3~.. I ~ ». e n-n@. Mohr ---_._..._____ szrzlirin ut "rem n r d n't F O know i-i I e er th too Oi 6' n0 W yt.6 Bishop-__.______decidedvery qiiddenig beeuue Casper ____._.___ ll:chem.-e lee.-med asthe timbe blue! he ll lilhle only F"?- 92 . -1~s-. :l<- -. -. ! '.H- -"-:. ._-'1..- -1-'~--=:- 1- . :35-.. Callahan -_.____, to haveto lag Perla a somere: Q ..~. I-i-"."'|"." 1:. -i..- .'3- ._» igdlorsae countr-y. en . bio Di do in -: i.' '- ' .I"1= >"+.'-I.'92'..- - " - .-1"!" ... 92 Conrad --__.._____ 'I um sorry I haven'tilven . ;"._.:._;. jr-.r.- _ -. ~' you more details about Dntld 1.-5'1-.+':'~."}°.§'.F1, :.f;:;|'. - ' "Inf.- Felt -__....__._._____ end 1 Know you mu.-rtbe very V "!-F; .17:-I,__;4».f-'.¬..?.,¥.v";'92,92 -1 Gale -____.______l.|>D0l1I»QworriedA my gndalso rigobairgly arty 11¢ an dis-"'1_. -,1.$_.,q5,'-I-Ii; y . ." i -* Inzllubman. But that d0ei~'iit.l ; 1- » 4. Rosen -__..______neoeosarliy mean 1 will have .-i. I-In _.- _ to nettle down in England for Sullivan --_..__.__ the rest or my-Ilia. We will; . - . __ ,.. J? probably be not all over the Q5; - '7Ul Tove] --_..;__._____ world. J " Y" Darling. I am terribly in love - Trotter ______.____ with Donaldand amsure there -r-Q-'.,}l-l_ ;_ °§7':" . §' '. will neverbe anyoneelse. I-ieis " *-'.-~'- ~.92.-.-'-;_. - -- Q7 Teie. Room _.__.___ the onirinsn I. have ever seen -'192»i*.'.:.'--I-.1-*i"4S_*!1.~ - i . , -'_.-_.-rd 1* I would haveliked to marry. ;f:.=~;;: 51:5. .L__ , n.. Holmes -_-___.____ We have known each other "92r"'.f .'"l'Y'*?-- 'l t nine monthsnow. [youso gee.... .k.; .. .,r.__i.. - r " .. . . i_ Goody --_._._____,__ no arenot blindlyrush nlinto ;*'.=1".1.-..1--Yr. l In 5 f arnlc research,'D'5rie.ld Dnnold- . ~ is ll! foot four Maclesn Luhis newposition bl-Ond withbenutliul blueeyes, F.;»Ti;:~=it-;;..-"*.:*2PX.3 92 f rt.- kt-".' " sew everydocument i'i'El'dlIli{ anon."11¢-old-her I belul-ilui ' relations onevery level between -- i» . ~ . i.-.1--; e ,1.-.. '-- -..~Britain. the United Btltel. and Donald: friendsthought. ""19 ¥.f'!!.:'*;|-i.'~=11 :5:-"1.-:;.'§'.1..;;E_4;,e< r.-. Canada. 1'»; He knew everything. andhe git:-it-cl!p mg I-rgerigly,éhatlhe lVIi.1'0ll8 was inGuy Burgess. ..ihe gobeiwoer|gave everythinl: he knew to the hurrying her largely to make Russians tor.paradoxically. the euro shecould escape.They lelt who warned Maciesrl of hie more successful he became in that she was intellectuallyhis Impending arrest America. the more antl- iiorior. which oi course. she Amrrlran he grew. Ins. But oi the two, shewas Culme-.S_e,vmour. oneoi his Innitely thestrougercharacter. drinking heavily and then. as closest friends,says "Donald The BritishEinbassy chaplain.always, hebemme bullyingand hated the Americans. and0/ the Rev. Eustace Wade.had violent. - alwaysthouizht theywould cause oonthicted his last niarrlaae In Agril 1944, two monthsthe next world war. 1 really lervioo In the eu1b:1_=s_92'chapel before -Day, Donald Maclean think he was more anti- that Avril, so Mvliilda.and was |JlO1Il0li':dto First Secretary American thannro-Communist." Donaldwere married at a civil at the British Embassy in Or was he this way because ceremony in the Marie or the Wasliimrton. . Surely Melinda his wile and her generous Pslais Bourbon district. must. have thought. in her own mother wereAmerican. andin The road to Bordeaux was country. near her faithful hating their country he was jammed _wi1-hrefugees. Donaldmother andamong herlife-long really 92'01Cll1Khis hatred for and Melinda silent the rst friends, her Iiie would be thernhls wilebecause shewas nlsrht oi their honeymoonin a dirl'ere:it.was, It but not the stronger character. his field underthe stars. It took entirely Ln the way Melinda mother - in - law because he them 10days to get back to expected. desulsed himselffor taklnzher Brits-In. money ? She waspregnant again.and The Washing-ton Post In Londonthey founde at, Donald's toaltitude herin this t every!-hingseemed si-rangesituation was casual. He left Times Herald-__.______Melinda. Sheknew hardly her in New York Ln her 1. gone, the oompiexitles or mOl.l'l£*l"swhile he _ ':l.re went on The lonlug proved clithcult to to Wgwhingtoiiand sharedI. ' e1'r-ti-ind.and the summer at with a man friend. TheWashington DailyNews ._._____ and autumn oi that year also Evening Star Washington! brought Germanair raids. - Ht humus The SundayStar Washington! ._._.._ 7»'i lbeunrf' His excusewas that it was iumrrsslblr tond a suitable Daily News New York! By winterMelinda wasDroi- home where thev could live Sunday News New YOl'lt! nant, and ehe decided to have tocether inthe crowdedcanltal. the child in America... She It was an excuseand no more. New YorkPost --i..._.____,____ sailed Ine. oorwoyand ltayed The eiiibossycould havehelned with hermother nearNew York.l.f tllvj-'had been asked. But The The child -was borndead in he was in fact content with April 1941. his lile as a married bachelor. TheNew YorkTimes -_.._.____ He seldomsent her any mono Melinda. sad. and dis- no wot she crew more and Sun Baltimore!-.-___..____~ flglpointed.e 'Iransatlantle ewbacki§]ht_ toLondon. thatmore dependenton her uiotlser. The now takes hours, took er more Mellndas firstson. Fergus, Daily World--_.._..______than slito'er-ks or because delayswas bornby Caesarianopera- The New Leader---.-__._____,__ in Bermuda. and at Lisbon tion on Sr-nicniber 24.1944. in _II-ltlng for connections. the H:lil92.Ilr$5Pavilion oi the The Wall Street Journal In London. the Macleans coiumhia Pi' 'Sb_lrl.0l'iaYlMedical D The were "bombedout oi one at Centre. Donald showed his National Observer-..%___.___ . and then out or lhother. On delight at iatllm-log a son by nding a at for the three oi People's-__..__..______World both occasionsthey escapedthcin in Washington. a move Examiner Washington! that marked his promotion to Inhurt. Acting Counsellorand Headoi _'II-IE SU_NDAYEXPRESS Chanceryat the embassy. The end oi the war was at LONDON, ENGLAND last in sight; Enormous and Y muevent i;.e n Wunirilaglned changesof policy om.- January 12. 1969 I2; Perla.Her lthusbl-nd1% were imminent in the relation- I . ship between East and West. RussianFrom allies, being"our Soviet Egllantussla. _.:.';.r":.'i....==§....."*"was it: now the nextSi. Dotentlsl -__.l __n_.-_ i.__.¬____,______A__ enemy. For the following touryears. . .wlthltand. and Russiaovertake desDcrate%glp_rj,¢;- inerlcan . .-.-.. -..92

. I. I1 . $4 _...'*. WP. _~_,!I_ ;_4i_,- 4 ,92>_92 qt §~_ -- "?.Z.*'* .__,,>..92}'¢§ '... » .-;*f**~;"...... I ..-:'.Y'.¬;T:7.*_~:.%'.i~elr;°.-I§"»f___7§'¥~e:TIt.§.iE.i¥L.*4.c*'.+"3?f:3§r"3'¥'Ti' . . L _¬e;,,'-. _ _--...|...,':¢ ""7_»__~: . 37,. ; hr. l _'_.__ '- J" * - - - YTQFOIHI Hts anti-Anierican remark eiv more and more vicious t diplomatic parties he an i./ci_iuuL.ii -_-__...._.._ rlinda. tended to sl-and asid I um the lruests. with them. butM Mohr ----__._.__..._ already em. somehow not quite of Some people believe that Bishop-..-_.______Communist agents worked on Mellndals own divided loyalties her dur1nglLl1!sband unhappy picked time. quarrelswhen Casper -_-_-_.____ ever more recklessly. when eontetirnee it seemed that the only bond between them was Cdllohon their son. A second eon was born. again by Caesartan. in July, 1946, l.rid Conrad -___._._.___ named Donald Marling. It seemed that their marriage Felt -_..-___._._._.___ might have yet another chance when. two years later, Mriclenn Gale was appointed Head oi Chan- éery at the Britten Embassy in Fiosen airo. Sullivan I-rom 1 at in Washington". t.he_v now moved to I three- Br the time they arrived ltoreiled house in Gezireh, a Mnclean Wm paralyiically dnink. Tovel -_..._.______I .iiiibui'b of Cniro, surrounded by He seized Melinda by the throat. a large. walled garden. Four hoidinlz her hard uo B-gain-*1 Trotter -____.._._-__ servants ran the house? the the must as though he would Mrirleans also had I governess etrangle her. Other men in trie I Tele. Room and gardeners. party dragged him away. There In H/ti-llllllbli Melinda had was it lot or shouting. Melinda Holmes ..____._.___ seeiiird insatiable of controlliiig hrld her head in her handn. In l what daily lit-lo she could nd. the shambles. with the barge Goody ____._.____._ Mre than oiire her mother had nudging the river bank. an own from New York to dismiss 1.Egyptian watchmen. tear-inir l an obviously uiisattsiactory .l thieves. raised hi5e and! nurse. because neither Donald l challenged them. l nor Melinda eeerned capable or This Miiclean tool: is I direct t i!llli{ so. In Cairo their insult. He leaped on the old E servants soon summed up the} man. seized his rifle and waved couple. They grew logy sndl it around l|l.5 head. threatening eleok and sometlinee rude. ' everyone. Lees Mayiill. a. First Secretary in the embiiss_v.f jumped on M.=i:lean'i hick to lfouvznnr i restrain him. 'I'l-iev fell down The Maelecne had exchanire together. but onlv Mlcleim tie Rtll round i0r another stood uo. Lees May.-i.t1 had iore Iormal and more nice-cileaa. broken his lea. he c_:it.herine Wheel oi Cair .. |' l §'uiL'|'tl-iilll DEFLLQ5 blazed on end- l l es.s._v. llingmnst Qnce they entertained Prince The evening ended in_chiiosi Philip who 'i92'RS staying at the but Maclrni-i's career did not The British Embassy. Melinda was 5l1ff8lRILhOl1£{h hi.-i pocket did. hostess to ii dozen people who Melinda} mother wan so dis» or-tine to dinner to meet h.iI1'Ll go.-sled with his behaviour that Arterivarde others arrived to she cut her aliov.-once no her join in such adolescent games daughter. honing that this as "Murder." i 9'-mild make iier son-in-law Donald's oninion or his wire, sober tin. showed in coiiiemntuoua re- - It didn't. allhouzh Melinda; marks he made to her and l remarks about her lack or funds Washington Post about tier in t'0l_l l' l$l;I?llincreased. ll.lil{She always appeared exnlanatlons oi uolliiczil niaitcrs short- of monev. sometimes Times Herald ---r-i.-._.____._. which slie could not imme- The diately irrasn. ino bi8l11ll1K_bhl$habits on Donald's drink- Washington Daily News He. meantime. was drinklnt: The Maeleans. moved house. The Evening Star Washington!_____ more and more. He would Their old landlord orotested to arrive drunk at diulomatic cock- the embassy that windows had The Sunday star Washington? tail parties: sometimes he did . been broken. furniture smashed. Dily News New York! not arrive at all. and Melinda and electric dttinsis torn from would denutise Ior him. ll the walls. Once a. servant round him Sunday News New York! dead drunk with his shoes OH Maclean went o to New York Post --_..-._..._.______on a bench in the Esbekiel l Alexandria. end Melanie so Gafdens. drunk that he was arrested and The New York Times _-i______Then came an incident that l thrown into a jail usually showed to a wider aiidieri-ca his l reserved or drunken sailors. The Sun Bi-iltlinoreii_..?,,_,___ latent hatred or Melinda. and One sunday afternoon. The Daily World__._.__._._.____,,_ oerhans of himself. his lilo. I-1'ld l Major A. W. Sarisom. In charge- what he had become. of security at the BritishII The New Leader --__._._.______Melt da's sister Harriet was Embassy. was playing bowls at the Gezira Snorting Club when The Wall Si-feet Joumal staying anouting with thev them. to-oi: and a oartv to make of l Melinda interrupted him. She nr_.- 1 ,1. Iriends in a hired aniline barge '25 in t-ears imd holding bark The ivu.t.1Onal ubserver _..______15 miles no the Nile. Thev hvsti-rles. Her husband had People's World intended to dine with other- disappeared on Friday. she friends at their destination. ko l Eiuiminer Washington! they brought little to eat for . Terithewn tlkevoyage] léutf e ]ll0l8 an ;%hdrin_k. 1 eripl _'1_HI_:1 SQNDAY EXPRESS totrre-rgnrhours I-D-5!-E£i.' __.»- "'5':-' _ - -_ 'K.-w ."" '92- i.-*'92 4.""r-L - _. 1 "92"- .-e. -. -. _-. ._ :5,-i.*1-i-."?|}*-__.;~...,A.» -- .tf_,, ;92. %af"#:§1§-.".::i?i¥:;:zi an-eeli-&=..i..._ _.,__ -"T1...:.;"l-t==-._:~"'>h,;~-<;~..,,_% _._ ~ ,,_._ .._...-.:..~=. -i:e*~i.,.,,_§',;.-*;,J:;.+.. .1-.-.~=...... -._=¢.._.-..i_-...; ..¢...... ,_....._.1__..__ -I -e,..-I ~ _:_ .- I! l <2 92..: 0 Mohr Bishop _ Conr Casperad In-"'_"" *7 Callahan -_____.._.

Fell Gale Rosen ._,,._.92,» _ __. Suivunn---_,_ Tove! ' Trotter _...______._.___ Tele. Room Holmes ...______._ Guncly __._._.___..__._

l..l.__ ?

*4--. The llvaamngton l0Bt T111188 Herald__.__i__._.___ The Washington Daily News i__ The Evening Star Washington!______The SundayStar Washington!__,.._____ Daily News New York! __i___.___ v Sunday News 92'New ______York! $ -4L-. W New York Post ...=--92., ~1"J' The New York Times _._.__,____._..___ § L"" ->:*- x -----.-- The Sun altimorel ._.______. _ _.__ Q . The Daily W01-ld__..__..._.___.____ The New Leader __.__~.___i The Wall Street Journal _._...___..._.___ £ The National Observer ___._.______, 3 People's World.__}__._.___.__.._._._ Examiner Washington! __,______, THE-l_Z_SUNDAY____l§§}QfiFISS LONDON, ENGLAND Date 124%

, l.JeL.ooch -_..___.___ L7 O Mohr --__.__._.______Bi:-:hop______Cosper _-.____.___ ' Conrad Collnhdn--_.______--_-_._.___ Fell -______Gale --.-_..______i Rosen --_..______Sullivan --__-__._... Tove! -._._._~______Trotter -_-______, Tele. Room Holmes -._.__.__.___ Gondy -__.__ ....<- odn't any idea where he WI-I. first overseas lbvnrrment IJ Could i:m Bitnsom help her nd. Third Secretary. Sansom thought it unlikely So. on Friday, Mn}? 11. 1850. hat he would be in any hntei ; after 18 months in Cairo. at was more likely. Melinda Donald was put on a plane for told him that s air! lllJI'éillf1London. with six months leave Hnoloired in the Amer-iciinahead oi luni, and instructions Embassy had left the item or to see the Foreign Olhce con- her flat with them so that tiiey sultant psychiatrist. The could keen an eye on it while consultant wanted to admit him -Ihe was on leave. to a clinic. but Maclean refused Sarlsom and 0. colleazue went to go. Instead. he sought on a to the at. Maclean. drunk and Eimrnan psychoanalyst whom o n_alred. opened the door. Behind ew. him. also naked. another man lay on the bed: Bansom recog- i Gui]: . nlsed him as an English homo- sexual who he knew had om-e They discussed his drinking. been ii Communist. The at which the analyst is said to have wars ruined. The bath had been thought was caused by 9. guilt smashed with a marble shell.comp ex, piirtly due to Donald: They had jammed drawers of treatment oi Melinda. Maciean clothes down the lavatory nan. explained he could not bear the tinned UD curtains. smashedsight or her. and this aversion chairs and ornaments. drove him to drinir. and, when Annarentlv the tact that the drunk. to homosexuality. tenant was American had But even while admitting his irritated Maclean. real feelings for his wife. he The Washington Post -_ "What the devil do you could still write benderiy to want?" asked Mlciesn her :-- Times Herald --_._.______beiiiizerently. "1 om so protein: to you. my The Washington Daily News _...______ Nothing more," repliedsweet. for taking all you ha . ansom di'.92'l_i'. and left. Beiore had to put up with. Iilhor The Evening Star Washington! ie made his report he told eilnda where her husband was hating me. . . . I tlz_lnic ve_ The Sunday Star Washington!.__¬ -and with whom. you much.be rcil iy you, and my love darllrw. you. . ml;. . Daily News New York! I thought he might have By November. Maelean was lone of! with a man." she said back at work at the Foreign Sunday News New York! without surprise. Donald Otiice - unbelieva biy promoted isnt I. real homosexual-it'sas head of the American New York Post ~__.._._.______Just that he has to _degradoDepartment. He must have had The New York Times i_ tiimselt from time to time." nd Irlendsor foolish ones. Next morning she sought 1 eiinda decided that a house The Sun Baltimore!---_....._,____,_ Be;-spnal interview with the outside London would ofler ritish Ambassador. Sir Ronald fewer temptations for him to The Daily World-_.__.__._____. Campbell. She told him that drink. so she lived in an hotel The New Leader --____.¬______Donald was ill with a nervousin Sevenoaks until they round bl'_8_kdCl'Wll; she wanted per- a suitable house. The Wall Street Journal mission tor him to return to This was Beaconshaw at London to see his own doctor. Tateeld. on the borders oi The National Observer _._._.___,_ Sir Ronald agreed. He had known Maclean for nearly 12 --_-_-i_i People's World iigeiirs; he had been Minister in 'Quoted in Buriress Ind Mee- Examiner Washington! aria when Maolean had his letiu. by Pure! and But-herinnd _.__i__ __ _. ___ is L: ieclter _- and Warhurii__ _'"-:-:.-:_. .. _THE LONDON, SUND X ENGLAND

. I Date Janu

~* e iifl _-J-..f492,'e-92. 1. r---"_=-"¢~. -i *1 _ _* . _ ' 7 _,_ .' u_ M 4-<,_~._-V. o - _. .14. r. =;_ - _.p .._-I. i s v:__92,.; ' ,1 3/ Ia, i. Y.' * i ,.. e r ,~ _. r _;7 ll _ _*. 1; J 92 .- *2 "Hm 47* »~~*- ''{*'*"'"~ "a,...l92-~'.*;,'l'5" " -§92§:*--£:':~":~-"-;"=':"*~L1'.é"Hr-~..~-o .~<92- - - -- "- Ff , ..* ". 2-, =" ir "5 .. --.' ~. i-15¢ i' -= .r.1 9 "'-"* {.....zl_iT|i"_}".'.-.-.1 . '"A-i-.l1_.-..*.-i,~,'-1s~.--~;* ' ' r' - '."' .-31:,-'~_.~1*~..?t";ef.e,-;?I...;.»;."..=._-. . _"!~ '.- "92 '.. M-...».r~.-x-". l.i ---...._..s----1 i. to C Mohr ..-__'_.._..._.___

4- Bishop -"'_'*' , -.._.1E--0 F8Casper kc»! Callahan Conrad »92. st ' .. I */if-.-"'1 .:-",/_¢.;I -:- kg ~ ' ulna-. Gole * "'=~1*"' . t ..,.q'1I,._ .._ .-. I _= he.-1;. .-<.- ', " E... - -t4'1 Hosea , 4 ,__:?oi ' 1,/.1; gt ' Sullivan - .><.f-I? I.-<;~-*;rfr*l. 1 ,.k_.§ . ;}_1:'£r=;-I '1~f<§ ' Z:-"- - -r. - Tove] 1,--_.____._ r-__-_<~ ' Trotter R".':'-r.."~ j 1'1. Tele. Room -' "!w2=='__ ' ." . : Holmes ,_-.>IA Candy ._..._.._._._._.___

_:.> I __ 4

»¢.,92,". ',W'- .J¢" ¢.. --. .

The Wlshlngton diplomat. This 194-1 picture shows Mnelnn seatedon desk} o sirJohn Balfour. than British Minister to the United States. With them re two fthe Embls5!' stall In Washington -_ Mr. N. J. Henderson seated!Ind Mr. W. D. Kent and Surrey, a rambling glare of 12 rD0ms and a large sour egein. er. lthad grown he- The Washington Post lore in London, in Washington, Times Herald garden Again thcg were shortin Cairo. And then. on F:-id:-11'.of the 1_3r1t.lsh public. that Kho of money to buy 1 . and again l92-lay 95. H51. Donald Macleanh had no idea where her husband The Washington Daily News __.____ Mrs. Dunbar provided it-this 38th birthday. almost exactly a was. that she tvan 5 harmless time £21100 deposit so they hou.s¢wlfe mercilessly hounded The Evening Star Washington!L. could obtain a mortgage. Lear to the day slnce he ew by the Press . For a time.Maclean tplthrulléLondon rrom Cairo on sick The Sunday Star Washington! _.___ caught the early train baa: leave, he came hack on the Melinda Maclenn convinced {rom Oha:-ing Cross to Oxtei-1,5.19 pm. train from Charm: everyone of her dENl"1'IlLI13.[lOI'lDaily News New York! and then drove home, but gradu- Cross. _ to stay where she was~except ally the -need for liquor re- one person, her son. Ferus,Sunday News NewYork! ._..-._.i assc-rted Itself. He started to then seven. One day. rs. New York Post keep a bottle oi wlilsky in his Harmless Streateld round the boy in desk at the Eoreln Otcc. Then That night he had a caller- tears, and asked hlm what tho he would IHIS5 e em-.l_tj train. Guy Em-gees. Burgess had matter was. and nally the later train, and oome with the !'!¬!92.'5 that Ma::= " I keen thinking mummy will The eventually the last train. and lean was about tn be interro- go off the same as daddy." he have to stay, the night In gated by security men. The told her. London. - J t-we men left, Maclean sarlmz Don't be $111!." Mrs. Street» they had to are someone who neld told him briskly. or Melinda for L1? part was notlived at Andover. In tact. they course she wouldn't R0 and lea ve The a good housew e. She break- were on the way to Moscow. you. If she went she'd take fasted-in bed. and enlrazed a. Throughout the subsequentyou too. I New York Time _.__....._._i.. local wornan as houackeelel. Events moved Mrs. Streatneld Mrs. Sylvia Streatelcl. to run turn-loll Melinda remained Sun Baltimore! _____._.._.___. Beaoonshaw. The two boys DOl5£d_8$ any actress in the Ian both wronz and risrht. She was Th e magazines of her girlhood. Could wrong. because Melinda did go were often ill, and they looked it be that she vyas. in tact, 0. oft " the some as daddy." S-he Daily World unkempt, with lone hair. belorefar more convincing not-rue was rizht in that when Melinda The New Leader this became rash onable. and than most of them ? gent the tool: her children with socks concertinaed I-l0tt1'ld er. » Icruffv shoes. She convinced M.I.5 interro- The Wall Street Joumal Gradually Melinda; lire grew -...&rsitors, liberally rnlnded symm- The National Observer ._i__.___ *# _ J ii____ W_i_ 7 I and in impel-rent part fllEXl': Melinda's* life in [email protected]:--People's World ---_-_&._.._._._ 7 * ___* ____~ ___ *______!'___ Exarniner Waahingtonl THE i SUNDAY EX_PRES§_* 1~ii1o1..nn;F Date _e__e-Ia n near 1 2 _o,_l_9£59 =»',,'1...5 1 . La ,- J1,, - I A? '.I'**° , p1.111. -l.=.ai§- -1,! _ __ _ _-_ I._7 if _ . Q'- - 1".'*-*'*_'1-ar1"s"11"11=1:1.*1=r_s=r1I§[J- - .._; J '-1 . - _ ,; .1 .. 11 ' . - 1 ' 1 "I _ ' "11_. _ 1,1 _* :14 1''- - ';,= ,3-,1__1_1.§_ 1 - -_ L1. Jr._r-1 '.92 .1 of 1+rr»-:1>~_-L-111111-1-l** . 1 I - -1-. ....1";.1.": .-':';,I-'1'1 . I" - .... I 1 Hi1'.1"rIb§§'n--..,_.__ ''1'.1 ..3 | .._,-N-E.-_,1 1 . - Mi1iB;'.:1lYryy1______- . 1'*-.l'1--I 1 l 4" .¢ ff -4. .""-'.1_-'~ '_'V ~. 1 .,, 1 I ' '_ ' _., Mn-Ca:-pa:~,..______If 1 ._ 1 1-.=.;>1-1-~1~i1;1--411:-.1--, .-- -. 1 1 - 1_ 'n 1 1" *;_ .151 1 -,.-. _ ._ __ 1-!"1 . --.''1: -1 1 1 1 1 ~.~.>'11 1: 1 " -.5' 11- :~ l. - -1 I -1 _ m-.."c:11n1:11:11_..1. ~11-Tl " Mount Clipping E .1 '1®@11 _-; "."-'-. ln 590:0 allow! ._ 1-! _ . ' ii!"-.G410 1....-_---_ ;|l .3F,|iV -"~14_ .'-'-"":*:" ""11 ' = 1*:-h 'g;'.'5"' . .-11 11: __ 1. 1 :1. _ . :1:'N,* > 11-{W* gt, 1 ~ q- 1 1~-1 1--1I . =1-I 1-2". " .1"'1 ...- V ' I 15fl 1 ,-,>-'-11* H 1- ' '. 1.- """""'? '2'"' -I llr. RF-mn_____ '17 1*- E V INKED M : At an !n:;ue.92r.,we cororler 1 .. _ . ' wassatlslicll thatthe bpdr'" ll'r.TIWll. .-_;'t;:%WL.-'§~*'92'~1>1-92.1- - .-.- ~~1~ - was Buster C1f:1bba--- - ~. Mr. Trotter. + -,'._L1 . ,1. **_1_';_-;a.l192d'él.lI|d0D81{_Y£;dicl. recorc. - . Tale.Room. ______I] was qua" 1311 , ' HowCzech-born I-lutton Mr. ,_ H. -, 1--1-1 :- ..=-- :1 ._11.1~._~01-111111-.1111» believes C31!-_'1r.'I MissHolm»a..-.._ '1 . F_ _=H - I J?-"1'1-.-'.'"f.: I ;i_,z.. ".!....,.....'___ MI? 5,;~~ -lured by theRussians _.! 1-" and '1 Min Goody _.-.__ .,,..s..,.|,_..._. * / *'_*'I1-1-,-__-»ll 1';Hie-sa.w92s...f'..stlll allve.I. ¢ h - , G Ocu-1.1-..1 Mei s _. 7- -_"-___"'_u__i '1-"rnented'workln: proof Ist.hat."Cr:bb"§f fort-heRusslaxzs 1 3!--'1 v .1_aa an unclerwater.'1?1'- Indie-ct: 1'page, l;FROGMAN§1'--1 Instructor-ml: 2.naval bu: ~ -: noun of I: near Moscow." -- - Q,", .§-_1'_'- n.o92n::.=por,. _1., i.. 1 _ uad__ ,1. . M3201] '1any_ _ fl . How_was Craohcauzhz L 2' .-_.=.1,'-.: _:1I_-- _-. . He was trapped."-says Mr.. ' 0'1" ', . . 1 __ . I H r--j_.;.L';..gCRABB?Q¥§;.-1 ,..1- . - .*1- _- .1 the 'Hutton. Burzeas Ever " sinceandMacleanbefore '- 1 31--_ -gvrnzomrCon1- linkingderectlon there was 7 i .._, 5.. ._man|:ler"Busl1er".. Lionel~ T1F clique. or doubleagents ll ..* w/5?. ['._a;/r-1'-"J, r .- - *'Foreign the Otm-e.3 ~. - ..~1.1.-_."1'-1" _'|n.'-En 1 Crabb."thevanished navalrrog- "'1{1' ;_ 1-'-..1:1"-"lg."Amenz who them no.1 ' In Kl 7.5 L;-5,' 19a6."w1u1Man. _Third.1"5_1 .Ph11by.~anda FourthMm -"*1-Q;.1i_._- L1v".'7£*-r, 92 ._ - - .;.,-,3:rr Harold1;. "Knn" P111151-_» 92-1:- _..._,W. _ ii _|.___ Iwill bl: put forwardin g "K '1WhOn1I do not wan: to £1 :1 : 1.1 _ - 1 newbook to bepublished - " nomo." ' -. - .'.'= - ¢-!1'-'.'1. F -.._ ,. _.__.'1_, .39!_1;-- nexbsprlng. o Phlloy -resignedfrom the _.' '- -__ -' . -1,1", .- 1 - _ . 1_-gt? .'.1 1 ' ,5 1' "5 I'=The '-authorIs Mr.-T. Bernard_- 1'*._~.-Foreign 1e.1ortlyother Burg.1 in ss I951 netOlce- -; :._ . |_1-1 .1 _l'_-_1- 2 ,-I 1 -"llfton. who hasspent ' ' VI" Maclean theIn ed.sprmz or losslo Rlfsa.P111111; -' _-T;~-. .'1 - - : . ?i- -:_ ;. -"WEI!year: assembling". - - .:was m LondonJob-. _-; 1 :'W1 1 - I 1 "I_ *1-'5"f I -..1 1_ lnrormatlon.- '_ 1- hunting.- '. '"-rI1--F ' l 1 5!1$l¢I"'Crabb.the 46-rein "" ""-IIn September he obtained a > , .'1 _- __' I. ' '1 1 1" j 4_. .- H _ - 4 01:!11-.1r hero--henwordsnlck-carrying heldtho -1 . 1'92. 1'l * '.' _ 1". L~' Dostns correspoxudenv -~newapapern. in' t-he ' 1 . 1 33.5.and theGeorg; . A J _ - -'--"Middle-1 EIUSL.1 -_.-11.-l-1.1.' 1 ' u L '7 1 1 -u:1clerw-au~rcdi--wasabotage. anexport - In' - 1|- . . _ I -1- 1. - 1 '<1.92 1 ' 1-L1 1 ~~~--' 11..92~u-I--1---'..o..- '1--'--;11-11.1-1....___ _ l 1-1,_-. 1 1-:4On Inf-0 I-111:1 1. Port-.-mouch19511.1 19.Harbour111111-.-1 11¢_ -- -11.--1 T 11, '-i-¢¢'1'-. 1-, . I ' -.._ _ l ." - --".a ff-. If Rmwlnn Invmlaavemm the 1--"11: - ".1 r..-T 4" .. ._1, 1 1 1 .,.;f'- . I . '.1 1'1 ' vb1-" 1 . nr 1 I E brougm. M,K 1; ' _I".|92.;-15;;1.. 1 * P_-1 J .1. 1 1 1 _ ": ' and Ma:-.92h:1ls111§§§§1§h§1§. .-1 " »- .92_ . .,-F0an ' ' m_dTkm!%_d:crrlclal visit to vzvagsllzlgBritain ' .:---1.,. . -.1-...1- .. - " Ducal /J.//1:/£2? ' 1 . _;' u1tce.!hmrllo-1; months we-wingbodylater g '1, : Edlllolu-'._.' " - fl"'Hr1~.1an11ouulr,1111, ;'.'l 3 ~'92-"h°'1I-ID11- near Chlcheatm. " 1-_,. 1 A ulhor:' _ - ,-1|'~. - __Bu.-1sex._-_. I-.. 411-! --1.41 1,1 '1» __ J----1 _ 1 Edllor: __ _ 1"1'1 : ~ 1 -I Tulc: I/4.-J _ _ 1. 4__»..I ._h ,~1 1-_ _. I l £3 AFFJPIJn .1-1,, "111,_;_'i _.} , _:;1 1 '. -A l'L'vr~r.~=r'/11°61/L '.l . I _ 11- 1- E. .. 11 - .. . --J-.-:r::92.1 ~ , I '--1 ,1 11--1 - -1 __ 1-.._ 1 .. ..;- . - - 1 - 'G.2T1I;T.?.'T'é"§f'¥71"'1 .';~?'1 . .-. ._*_1. ..~. .- ~ 1 . ~~= . - l °'ii.-Q 1 _ _ 7.""l' -" ' ' .'-- < .b . .. W '-" , ' '0'- If . - __ .1_1,1- . . ' . K 1 1 VClquliicaunns11n11111u11q om '44-6J- ' 3 ,1 S .1 1-.._;_92'92.11. 1| 1 l '11: 1 I O Z11'.:'w.U;'r,1f J 1-L 1| _ E3 BolnqInvol ti qclnd 1 .L . .- . -_ W1 11"1962 .1;: _ Q1 $/3~4" -1 . ,1 -. ,1 RF-CORDED . - . .I.'x, '1- : U._ __. 9 1957 1 .-».-_1-,1,-_1,. 1 _. NOT r Lb;-l*é:¢@@#¥"1-1? -1_ !'». .1;1 _ ' ~ 5:1,111," W 1 > '1 '_ H1 ,_1.-_-1 |_.:__.: . _ .- .1_ -,-.191 ~:'I. Iii /iv. - - '-.1.;".-_1._|1 -1 1 I70 Nov , _ ".1,_ 1,'.-_ 5*-"":--Z"-1-.-:l=.f~":'i-. -I1'_~'41; 1I _ *1aw,' *- _1 ', 11: I 1,_m_l,1.1r 11-141, -W1 ,_|,, . _ I _,. . H - -- ! . 1.1 "{f/"'! '.;1, l __ ' i 711":1'1'1-ITF1;";T"-""|7?r17.;'b"r!-'92'*-1=r;?F§"*r-;**]-=-"r"-v"'vI-¢:1-fP----:"-yr,mm . "'1.-"_ I: A_ '1' . :1?-""1."=. 1-5-_¢"_1__:|1,r,.111 - ' - * i1i;f.r1*l;-:h|?r_.'; .' r- .1-I;-_.';1-;-;:1Y§?,.!§;*'§I I? -1,, '1} 4*-*'. H.1,-1.."l-11- "L "r?°"i="="'.-1 1- ' -.1_'. __ 1=-f.-.E'-4.1-1.-1-J-l".. -1 -111-.--I--1-1-.---_---...... -... "..g. "7 . _-E<;-_'!__ _|1lPi#t-'1, 1+.92 1n 1* Q*1 .-. F - ...F ._--...- -. -127102.: . hr ' by 1M0 v Bi .._._._.._-_.__- cl er._.___.._-..-_- i Callahan -__---.-__- Conrcld -..._..-_-.-_-_ Felt $!¢.;TcN22@r Kc aw Iicx Gale on the Dolile Flosen '" *-~»~ ~ ______.l. 92--I-o-3. _ I ludl'§l_ur The wuhnptq-_.;=,;9230 EBQF §.had "flock It It was disclosed loot veg l I-°1§D91*l, Ffnglsnd. Oct. our re a onship hr:-coin-that divorce Sullivo ll;-T e eie anged thirdP18?-Bl? new way," she wrote. wife and reins led rs. wz e mas r so She stayed in Moscow with Macmi:""ili»' c ch tximffighllo mewyh him for two years, but re- Mlsi_ Phil-by laid did not lur- Tove} band W51: member 01' the turned to Britain in 1965 pris British Intelligence Service, and later settled in lreland. but never suspected that for About halt of Seales book She tound herself shut of! will be I. description of Phil- 80 years he also was an from .her . former _ Jrie sI an -in Trotter _._.__.._-._.. agent for the Soviet Union. bys life as double agent and _Loi'nioo*-who. Vii1'en*-silo"journalist. The remainder is Tele. R00 m ...___.___ Eleanor Philby, the Amer- trie to see thorn usually Mrs. Philby'a account oi her ican wife whom Philby, now life with him in Beitrut. Holmes-___-_-___ living in Moscow, has appar- ses1i*ra'-H msknir-some kind of excuse, and that One of my personal res- Gondy ._..-_.____ ently divorced, said in a was that. Now when they sons for writing the book," copyrighted story In the read the whole story, per- she said, was to work out London Observer that her haps they will understand in detail what had happened husband probably was able to me and to understand to keep his dual role o how I felt. The "whole story is a how I could have had such a secret because one activity full and intensely happy was a perfect cover for the book on which Mrs. Phllby is collaborating with Pat- marriage -with s man I now other, and Kim's work for the rea'lizir'i~:'ri-6-nit reai§5r"'=='I92="7-" Observer was good cover for rick Scale, who succeeded both." -~- - Kim Philby as the Observ- Philby went to Beirut as ers Middle East correspond- Middle East correspondent ent and who was also the for the Observer and the ghost-writer of the Observer Economist in 1956, after be- article, The book was origi- ing cleared of allegations that nally scheduled to be pub- he had tipped fellow spies lished next autlumn, buttha /M . Guy Burgess and Donald Mac- run _lng battle etween e lean that British Intelligence 0bsgrvar'-srrd _th§"on-d6n_ was about to arrest them in 1951. While in Beirut; Philby othe Su11limes; i_3y¢ 1:10 t beAat;ea_cl; met and married Eleanor. In Philby story has accelerat- January 1963, fearing expo- ed tho timing, possibly to sure, he fled to Russia. next spring or earlier. Mrs. Philby knew of her Mrs. Philby described her marriage to Philby as "D9!- on husband's continuing work for the British, as "it is com- iect in every way" even mon Intelligence practice though Kim shut me out of for a wife to be told that a whole side of his person- The Washington Post ality." She implied that She A5/_ T. fl."/.':&:~.s';i.;" A / her husband is doing secret :1_- -, rm . .4 -92_r92n work to keep her from get- left him in 1965 because 0! , .92 Times Herald _ ting suspicinus about his ac- _-his romance with the wite 1, ~ --92 The Washington Daily News _.__. tlvities. of Donald Maclean. V1110" ." -. also lives in the -Emil-1 B11-Yr The Evening Star Washington!1. She knew nothing in ad- 8 vance, Mrs. Phllby wrote, lsh spy ghetto" Ilgosco . 1-c-...r'-'92 - The Sunday Star Washington! .._..__ a ut her husband'3 defec- Daily News New Yorkl _-.._._.___ -. t 0 W " e George Ghe%hh&entBlake, who escaped sI Sunday News New York! ______next m e last year from l.'2'5I1¢f0l1'l'New York Post ._....______,__ was questioned by Intelli- Wormwood Scrubs Prison. The New York Times __.__..._._..__ gent!-'*92iFHiccr'$ d§"i1n'r:iritus-presumahlif with SW59 '5' sia and the West about Phil- sistance, while semng 8 42' The Sun Baltimore! .__.._.___..i_ hys activities. She went to year sentence tor esp1on»'-1_BBl- The Worker _Moscow later that year to Kims sifair with Molmd live with him. Maclean started when I W35 The New Lcadcr When I got to Moscow still in Moscow two 19¢-1" The Wall Street journal _._.___..__ and really understood for ago," she said. It-M31112 11113 must inevitably have causod The National Observer _._.___i @2241-....~M@1@.:2;o*r.E.e..,r-as People's World .-._-.__._._.._..___.__._ <;;;[uuilT§l967' Date ___ e . , _._.. . _ fr, 6 _g" é $7?-1'1 -[-3 i t OCT 1.2 i957 - -* r .- I-'~ 4 "~ . e . -"H .» . . '- " " 5' ' L. ."*- ' .- ":1"... . =d*.=1E3..»-t."~"I.- ,."s'I.'-t=-..-2'3-

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"~W?~7 ;-T:-_-___%,_%*_;=:.T§=e-_.-_-_':>1 4 -- - - -" " :!__.-=:_1;_-*#F.- -' ,ivcW KCPOITS 011; iiloy pp}? base or L" Vex Britain 11 K r" re xcisper Collcihon i 5,,,ku,,-;-,,,,.,,,,_ ltrlilallnewspapers.a previous -W,-i-i,,,,, notices a out pu -1 e lthlisc ievcs congolldanggléo it wilfantastic] lnfiltratit]in." make c ear 92 LoND9N'Oct7 The cascllitlinn of information about a need for reformsin marl Conrad Kl}! thethird man"-divcrtingBmhI-me. Cd ta Sh r Felt intcilieencir _ __ But DavidAstor. owneran: iraham Greene but vexing and d Knownas ii. gdnotice editorthis The or SundayObserver, disquieting when it is re:il-- ocunient amoun toaw-In laughs oft the social $l"f1lfl- Gale has been reopened by Britain: mg toIPG pressfthat grosccgcanoeof the story. A51its it. Sunday pi css tion migit resut rom e ii in e 5 0 i 1 ' ' Hoseii | The third man l§llZlf0lil licationof names ot inilelli!Y'cr192cl§a¬1d'ffgiflbyngglglénigagg Adrian Russell Klm Sullivan _.-i.--_--- a'l1'EF§li!lTilTEil'was-rspy g%IlC%a ou whoe organization orti£fflC1&lS 1Hl01'?l&I£illdCCBlVEd o in siaiis. like anybody us, recruit theirRusThe for the Soviet Union while llssme agents among thisocially satis _-_..i-i,--- serving sometimesas a ]Ol.llIl3.l i Officially Governmentdc fled segments their of society-i if-Il.I92_aist but more oiicnfor astheme a fiction counterbyj;- '-_'gen comP P Beacan ll Tove! intelligenceM eiipcrt for Britain's' PgfigexsH DU 6 1 y iiffllfaylll SOFICS.| I1°l11]':18 1'1| |][92l,-Q1is_ sil}l¬y to blame_ the It oldbofi W16 key department of the vately, officialscomment wryly The bid boy new,-oi-ii "is . British Sercret Service - - l- °"Ii 1-he'-"1713Pl1Y U181 BTW 531111 reference tothe tribal .. confi The Londonnewspapers have Trotter isclosedat that I his nduties- in s on £1.dJ0l1l1111|1§U¢ server e Soviet¢11%1'Prisedcnce - nion's.:i;, saidmg i tomutual exist among backscratclh t e and 1 --lea c°m°nn3s°°t- e5Pll1"l-"estJ . 111 . '. d°1118T1ll~1T12 Bflllshlgraduates "1 l" .' of exclusive, ' "' class ' 11aE¢- CfmlmdlgBl-1511 H1 intelligence with new disclos orientedBi-irigi-i rivareschools Tele. Room Itclllgencc. ' .OD¬l'3tliOS . In T'l.'l1kl_3V . l ,iii-0: abinu: the 'handscnv-re.'I ' quiet 'i P lanai have ' trad-iaahysupplied Fand - liaisonwith- the- Centrali 5pi;.ii;ei-iP11i1by . '. _ large percentage- of British- Holmes -_..-----t Ii11cl1'S'3l1¢¢. -I 111 W391After ASEDCY he| left the_ Foreigniubiic_ " I _ servants -,,' ington,' ' with access to Amer I ' 5""°°' "1 1955 """°" 'W1 Tll l , nuSi riificance of the Phil ' ' Goody ican secretinformation open Charge; weremet byof [R i" _ h . . , 1 i .. _ l -- 1 .- .. ii 92 // - I L. . . . is ; ' ' '_ _ ' _ - l u] U /-92 ' that Philby managed to carry .0/2 - *-. _oii his career for 30 years, until 32° like Philby and Blake at /i,- L. the beginning of 1963 when he Born in 1912 in India worlr in Moscow. we had better defected- to the Soviet Union-_ _ Philby wnc' .i-lwi-a_ 3 Ambaa'92vaigh 1 _. out. if _tl'iev_ l not havei I ' -: l 1,-,d,3_' ' anNew . yea,--5Day~ -ll in lctually ' Fl leftsome time_boii_ib C! >»'ii>i;J_,,/ / i Followed More Precautions, l 1912 Hisfather, _ HarrySL John . l'19111115 11183_ 1', are _ °°"5d"."." - ,. 0 . _ -1 withHis defection such disclosures came longas-Liacial Philby, was denials atthen various ii atimes Labor-I an FY 1°11 °°l9"'°t° EB l-heml Z" is "119 P°51l-*9 '°"Y"l:-/> .i;; ,,-3 _". -* 1li111-51?-,after BritishT119 3i-1l'1d8Y securityTlms prccau author, "dlConseivative' desert coalitilln explorer,of Arab5i.lii92ariy 1!°'- Sritons . expressed wasby . ~_ m »~ iTlie_' one wereObserver supposedhave shaken to havethis scholar,lei-ice,Fin,-iliy Moslem intheconvert, summer friendf this_ 3901228 wccl-tsBlake Spectator15 "-111°-l1'3'maga- *"""""3m -1 - capital.been strengthened--in mostPerhaps part to iinnerv-1963of '1'. PhilbyE. Lawrence identified ofwas Arabia, 1511 $P.Y-It said: br.zinc. who"while last ocwbcrthere es are. /CLZ7, ml;insure thatOfall 111911 thered15¢l0$I-lF¢S would be noI5theadviser toGovernment King lbnas Saud,l Sovie master a dP95 immminds wormwlmdactive and slzrubs bodies L; , ' | repetitionl of the 1951 Burgess official- ' in the civil service 1l1F1$°¥1- 'where 11° '355='""3 . , Macleart affair.' l _ Ind,-3_ .42 . . . _ year sentence. The third man" label was .. g attached to Phi y after it be L. came known that he had en land at Trinity College, Cam 111"-11"! °f Pl-ll'b5'in Rel I _ l .. L 92 ti !*-.

5- i ' ' Young Pliilbyhad3 brillianti, . In thesame '~=@1<lei I;-Y1"Thwhi°T_ EI ° P °sL I H record, at Westminster School imiiay - Times Wa= Pub 15"1-*1 "M5 '='=1d abled thelate GovlbBurgess - anon,»9, t-,»}i¢,-3he firs; ah,-,;,,-W, E r1ii2_rero1b-e!_!1-B-*='5P"*-?15FE!E1 c ''I'hWli' as in . g ion ai YD'lN. cws .__...__... r. .Dorlald Maclcziri,hen servinrtanD' . inge;-gstjn .. - communism - -'| 'j_ ublisliing;plC£t1leS , li ofBlak The Evening Star Washington! ._..__ lswimming in a F-aiirasian lalt . - 92 'has Britishdiplomats at OinWash-l Jlidc, n1 have alwayg " been onthe E!y E ._.. 1!1Bt01'1-escape K0 to Moscow; left he oncesaid but I have The Sunday Sta: Washington! __._.. .b@f0r¢_wY °°F1[d lesleilincver ll been aCommunist 8 alp - be Daily News New York] "-01195P1011E!£»'¢¢l1flTi2¢5- l l I have though known peopf The articlesin the two Sun who were Communists atCa Sunday News New York! l ay papers CDl'liTld92_das-l bridge that and for years afte i , if_ cad _ of the MI 6 section seek _ ward, .. ' New York Post ing to counter Soviet espionl -The two Sundayipapers dil The New York Times Q3 lage, Philby_liad__t9__I*ia_v_e__access fer on the date and site of his The Sun Baltimore! l. I9_q![.QE.Britains , s- SEC!l'J£..l.lIlfOlC J recruitment by Soviet intelli mation about the Soviet.Union gonce, butboth agreethat it The Worlier '- and similar accesst the cqiiii-=was in trie early nineteen-1 The New Leader thirties and that Philby'sas» 'alerit intelligence_.___""aMl1E_.__l_i_C;1I1signment was to penetrate Brit- The Wall Street Journal i 'Tt"so,_'lie92vns'inuch im- more I1-ic National Observer _portant than has hitherto beei-it't ii ll . ' - -realized. ills _ eqLll%.l:tl¬l:Cc3l.lO92'925asa joug- Z F*{!%;3, Ifeoplc 8 world ii_i_--__i-_-_- J Alarmedand oiribarrassed,nalist,established duringthe "" Date '1 I ' 1' the British tl£l.l:e'PFGovernment IllUSli|lSpZlI]lShCivil ;S;r}:';']lllgsIlQ;1;i¬l!;DlgymBt War,_Britishled _to hi? intelli- _,______N01 RE¢QR|35'_p iii. i.-"B ' i '' - . . Bc c . l - ~.;iE::l:i.";;iii.i Harold editorEvans.of Thel 45 OCT16 -- ' I I-newspapers engagedin a war Sundayfccls strongly Times, _ }-92 Q, of nervesand eachchafing tomakethat many Philbythepeople disclosures"wonder.will Its!-1? -' f {,» .-_ ' start its series orarticles fir_st,|jii5iwhni; kindof ggcigi indi- ie G<>.92aer:'-"-=r.t.issucda noticeadministrative structureled _iii_>_ im@""1'*tS /is4 T ______q _ W _._i,__n - .,..- ._. W ~ . . _- ""-.92..;~-.i u-;~.._ ,1 _ :g_-92.r"~,r,92..~I _ . :5-;. I».f~--=--»_-'_.' _ .. _,7 __ -.»,4 rar,_ _ _ e bserver'sfear itthat wa5_|_&;; '92 Mohr toT¬£l't'o'o"bed"e may h ave eenb ll eight- - ened by the appearance at about this Bishop HA SpcctacgléiSpy time of s government D-notice, s device by which editors are asked to voluntar- l rom leet Street ily wlthhold certain information involv- Casper ing national security. The D-notice was l BtpliyRobert Molt L. worded to cover almost anything about J . - IaahinltonPest For-clanlorries British intelligence operations, and it ~ LONDON-The reading public in thil was strongly suspected_that Whitehall- Cullohun _.-...,livnlu ...... and mnai...... onmnntitiup-.....,...... -.. ..-....,...,....nnwananar issued it to'preventa Sunday Times town in the Western world is currently "spy expose" calculated -to counteract Conrad ._...._..____ enjoying one of the bloodiest journalistic the Observer: publication oi the Svet- battles in memory, Last Sunday, Brit- iana Stalin memoirs which the Observer slns two Sunday "heavyweights." the won by ootbioding a number of news- Fell Sunday Times circulation 1,500,000] snd. papers, includingthe SundayTimes.! hear-new...... _. mnnnnm 92...... -....,Ian:-marl .....,,-...... inin us-int,...._.e.. - IN-O almost but not quite simultaneously- SUSPICIOUS oi the government'stim- wlth thelatest detailsObthe career0! ing. and after a bit more sleuthing, the Gale master spy_l-laroid Kim Phiiby. - Observer decided to ignore the D-notice Philby's extraordinary 30 years as s and go with a Philby story last Sunday double--agent-tor Russia and Britain's in order to blunt the expected blow from Rosen bit-6 came to light nearly five years the Sundeg; Times. in whet must have ago when he fled to sanctuary in Mos- been a long Friday night. Scale pitched Sullivan _-_----- cow, and thus tar, at least, the "star- .in with two Observer staffers to produce tling revelations" promised by both news- ii Philby story, and the Observer adver- papers have generally been public knowi- tised that it would Publish. the following Tovel edge. More fascinating to the vicarious Sunday, a first-person account by Mrs. participants in Fleet Street: never~end- Philby, ghost-written by Seals. . Trotter lng battle for circulation and attention Scarcely minutes after the first -edi- Teie. Room .__...._ is what the Phiiby spy spectacular" re- tion of the Obseruer hit.the street Sat- veals lbcut the ineptitude of journal- urday night, the Sundoy Times, which Holmes _..__.._._._ istic "espionage" on one of the most was holding its Philby series for the P92§92-1-:n92-I] r-I~H U '_ _ gossipy streets on earth. T following Sunday, flew into action. Game- cu iy but somewhat iarneiy it managed to IF THIS LATEST Philby caper has put together a Phiiby story for the read- a beginning. it is probably a year ago ers of its later editions, and laromised when the Observer: Middle East cor- further articles that would document respondent, Patrick Seale, took a leave how Britains security forces were pen- of absence to collaborate with the now- etrated in the crucial cold war years. eslranged Mrs. Philby on a book about On the following day, the enuntrfi her husband'slantastic career. The Ob- daily newspapers started nibbling at server had hired Phiiby as its man in the leftovers, ranging from reports that the Middle East alter receiving what Philby is now married to the ex-wife or proved to be erroneous government as- !e11ow~sp,v Donald Maclean whoalso surances that he was out of the -spy lives in Moscow! to interviews with Phil- business, and Scale had replaced bys former intelligence chief who in- Philby when he defected in.1963. The dlgnantly labe1_ed._ his ex-protege a Observer obtained rights to serialize "blacltguard." -, Seales book in the British Isles. ' It is too early to say what action it Surprisingly, the Sunday Times did any the government will take over the not find out about the Seaie-Mrs. Philby ignoring of its D-notice, but at least one project until early this year. Apparent- embarassed Whitehall official found a ly to take the gloss oil Seales book, bit oi solace. "It anybodys security serv- which is due to be published next year, ices needlooking at," he observed, "it's the Sunday Times quickly dispatched Flee ee 's._:__u "hit-v=' its super-sleuth Insight reporter team to write an exhaustive series of articles on Philhy. The Observer, whose intelligence system was no better thanthe Sunday Times, did not learn that -the Sunday The WashingtonPost Times was now following Philby's traces Times Herald . The Washington Daily News .____.. -until less than a fortnight ago, when ..--- _ a brief item in Newsweek tipped them. i-'1:-921" 1".--/G?-ii-Ll The Evening Star Washington! _....__ Events then moved swiftly. Scale, who The Sunday Star Washington! _,__ was pledged to give the Observer only 7-, lJ'Ji serialization rights to the book, met with Daily News New York! _..___._.._..__.. JJohn Phiiby, 24-year-old son-of the spy, _ J...-4----i Sunday News New York! .__.._.___ who hadjust returnedt Moscow on New York Post .._..__...___.___i_ e znission nanced by t_._- _nrlrl-ny Tintest -Based onhis t-onverssliw the unli- The New York Times __.__h_____ a tiv oe y ung Ph'lb1 y been ' "l 1;, The Sun Baltimore! _.__....._...__.____ _Seale=»i*l~@*u:aotii:iiilc=~» c t Sunday Times The Worker ____._.._.._..__..__..____ ,was about to spring its series on a_n_un- The New Lender ______su 9ublic, an» an . no ._ -. . The Wall Street journal _.______e -__._,..._ ..; _- __ . :__ _.-.._.._..- " ;"*;'** 'T":, '-.'_i if ::_~ _- -_-'___---:f'__-f""_'_'f' ti __ '' '"i R _ . - V! is . . U; 1. -4", _ , Q1 ,,, 5 ,4 The National9292 - Observer _.______.. People'sWorld . , t ' 7 OCT' Date - - - -__8 195.7 _,,

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London lum-lay TimonI-117' LONDON, Oct. 7--A se- cret intelligence report which the Sunday Times tracked down in Washing- ton in the course of its in- vestigations into the Phllby conspiracy makes it clear that. contrary to repeated British government asser- tlons since 1951, Donald w Maclean had access to every crucial Anglo-Ameri can policy decision at the height of the Cold War, The report was compiled in 1956 by U.S. -State De- partment intelligence offi- Q-i-I-I--I cers in an attempt to assess the damage done by Mac- aJ92.- -.....v,,.__ . lean~ and Guy D. Burgess, C or J, M l..¬L who fled with him in 1951.- A For the first time, the re- r,- *.-W -avg portreveals the magnitude liP°+r55L_er __.______.._ /2»of Mac1eans espionage . 1,, __ 1 _Coliohdn __.____ achievements. to the Russians. Just before ' Conrad _._.___._ It is also the first evi- he died, MacArthur com- i dence from official files plained that the Chinese not A .:_ _4_4.V;%:_¬_1.? I Felt that the British government only knew of this policy de- I re . Vital Gale has been consistently mis- cision but "all our strategic leading in its statements on troop movcments. Boson ' Macleans duties and the 1 - Sullivan _7.____. type of material to which Ibeen Until believednow thathas Maclean. it generallyi 7 " '5?! "if Tovel ' he had access. first secretary in the British s+,»~ Trotter _.___._._. In fact, the 'U.S.intelli- Embassy in Washington and gence report reveals that later head of the American Teie. Room Maclean had knowledge of Department in the Foreign ' . ' I * ' - -' _' - - 11-1 Holmes .._..___..__._ secret Anglo-American ex- Office, passed to the Rus- ..-_,:_. I; , 35;: - Q changes on the North Al- sians only marginal atomic ._T4; M;- , - _ H Goody ____.___.___. " ."..-,'92<<,~, . _ .-,- . lantic pact, the Korean War secrets. He saw these in the P-.;.. '._- " K and the Japanese peace course of his duties as L'.K. Z-*--.~»:-3.--~ ' 17. - - - - l treaty. secretary of the combined 1' .='=..¥-6". - - ' I!" i I '' It also shows, for instance, policy committeethe body that Maclean had full knowl- - ,set up Donate to regulate - the_-sass Anglo- .1. 'l_l'Y- . -- . -~._..-.Iv-- - _ QEQS. _ edge of the critical Ameri- . . . took their secrets to Moscow in I951 can determination to lo- /I U-W " calize the conflict," and U therefore of its decision not canoe of Gil;t is the U. circum- to allow the United Nations stances of 1947 have to be forces under Gen. MacArth- recalled. In the early post- ur to carry the war against the Chinese coast. war years the world supply Both MacArthur and his of uranium was thought to {U chief of intelligence, Gen. -be limited. The West there- Charles Willoughby, were fore embarked, in extreme certain at the time that this secrecy upon a. program of informa_ion hidheenpassed Prompt-ive buying of uran- - 92 . ium, in an attempt to corner all the known resources. Maclean was in a position to tell the Russians every de- ell ll tail oi. -these vital negotia- tions. . - ' in;;&JI3i A 6 OjfThe revelations -_Q provide -v--I U the ,first? credible explana- tion of the necessity that The Washington Post L ___r AI I . _--5 American- , '-- - . _'*,.i exchangeg, of mien-Odmve'_ _ Ph » the '"'5t°l"$l>Y '&""Ei'i¬Harold ':- . " '..'R~.'.v- tlfic information . 4-. 1: on ~ the Times Herald 7'/k/ z/ aatornic program. | _..il.|2.Y to risking, an in The Washington Daily News .__.____ This information was vital event wrecking, his whole enough, the report reveals. espionage career, to tip off The Evening Star Washington! __._ Macle-an was able to tell Maclean before the British The Sunday Star Washington! _..___.. the Russians "'the estimates security services could reach Daily News NewYork] I made at that time of urani- him. um ore supply available to Maclean was not, as previ- Sunday News NewYork! ___.___._.__._ the three governments- ous explanations have sug- New York Post _.._._..._.._.______Britain, America, and gested, simply an old friend. ii The U'l92['92l?V .--.1-u n -I

Colloho Ii! r-"""""-"Q= Conrad

suntan 'ltonmii Oct. 1--"rue-ease DeLooc'h _-___i of the third mandiverting Mohr --_-_--_- 9 as a theme for fiction by Graham Greene but vexing and disquieting when it is real- {V lhas lN'FW VX been reopened Qrzfazn; Rs by Britain:Otis an Phi1bY Sprcees 5W3 Q3}; Sunday press. i rmed and barr s d, t The "third "I'HlI'|lI'YO1'l'I'|IIIIlman" is- arold thégflfls Governme'n'f_ must A_dria.n.1iw:se1l Kim!%'!Ei'1.'r5.r-expect that the press will now an"Englishman who was a spy delve into the workings of for the Soviet Union while serving sometimes as a journal- British intelligence. Three weeks Fiosen -_--____ ist but more often as a counter-, .§i3.:.;'§.,§£..°.-f°.1;.'..ll"i.-S;.3:ll!Sullivan sintelligence expert for Britain; oi nerves and each "chafing to Tovel --__-_-- M16. key department of the- ;start its ries 0 equal-a.s.f.|.r;s' ' t. British Sercret Service. _Q0e¬-e-regiment issued a notice] Trotter _...____._ The London newspapers have Tele. Room ___._._ disclosed that his duties in- b blldaE Holmes _....___._ I f clean countering Soviet espi- . ugp onage, comman ing British in- - Goody -___-_-_ telligence operations in Turkey a 11-pm,-rm? s noticesrlnnvb. ,and liaison with the Central llcation of information a ut Intelligence Agency in Wash- British intelligence and counter- ington, with access to Amer- inteliigence- .ican secret information. Known as a "D notice" this ' With such disclosures as document amounted to a warn- these, The Sunday Times and ing to the press that prosecu- The Observer have shaken this tion might result from the pub- ,-capital. Perhaps most unnerv- lication of names of intelli- ling of all their disclosures is gence officials or information .that Philby managed to carry about the organization of intel- ion his career for 30 years, until ;the beginning of 1963, when he iigence. defected to the Soviet Union. Followed More Precautions 1 Officially,Government de- partments are saying nothing His defection came long [about the Philby stories. Pri- after British security precau-l vately. officials comment wryly tions were supposed to havei on the unhappy fact that Brit- been strengthened-in part to _ - D / . insure that there would be no ish journalistic enterprise PI-WIIIH I-P".'1'-Isa e'__92-1-' .-J should serve the Soviet Union's é KECORDF-.E! repetition of the I951 Burgess- interest in denigrating British Maclean affair. intelligence with new disclos- A-Y r " 1'2 oer The third man label wasl ures about the handsome. quiet- attached to Philby after it be-l spolten Philby. came known that he had en-I After he left the Foreign abled the late Guy Burgess and Service in 1955, rumors and Donald Maclean, then serving open charges were met by of- as British diplomats in Wash- ficial denials, then by a Labor- ington, to escape to Moscow before they could be arrested, Conservative coalition of si- on espionage charges. - " ,- .lence. Finally in the summer of 1963 Philby was identified by _,,,_.,__,r_,_ .. .2: - The articles in the two Sun- the Government as a Soviet day papers contended that as agent head of the Ml-6 section seek- Bornin19l2inIndia ' ing ito counter Soviet espion The Washington Post age. Philhy had to have access Philby was born in Ambalari to all of Britain's secret infor- India, on New Year's Day in Times Herald -_i-._...____ mation about the Soviet Union 1912. His father, Harry St. John The Washington Daily News _._.r_ and similar access to the equiv- rPhilby, was at various times an alent American intelligence. lauthor, desert explorer, Arab, The Evening Star W3Sl'lingl0rll_._ If so, la; was mlulch more im- scholar, Moslem convert, friend- The Sunday Star Washington!-- portant an as itherto been of T. E. Lawrence of Arabia,-l Daily News New York! ___.._- f8 _ liaisons-9 - _ adviser to King Ibn Saud, and official in the civil service in Sunday News New York! ___i_ India. , New York Post --__.-_._._/,...... _.._a Young Philby had a brilliant The New York Times record at Westminster School -and at Trinity College, Cam- The Sun Baltimore! --?__.i_ bridge, where he first showed, an interest in Communism. l The Worker I have always been on the The New Leader __.._.-_.._..i____ left." he once said, "but I have The Wall Street journal ..____..__w_ never been a Communist al-, though I have known people The National Observer ._._____ who were Communists at Cam- People's World _....__._.;..____ BC V367 A 'W, br'd e nd f f - 0 , 5 C O

H11 5 O I5 recruitment by Soviet intelli- gence, but boti-i agreethat it was in the early nineteen- thirties and that PhiIby"s as- signment was to penetrate Brit- |.'ish intelligence.. . iiis qualifications as e inur- naiist, establishedduring the Spanish Civil War, led to his employment in'Bi'itishintelli- 1S ence. Hamid Evans,editor ofThe| Sunday Times, feels stronglyl ithat the Phiiby disclosureswill; make many people wonder "just what kind of social and tirriirritive stri!bt92I'i'e"l'eup 92l'lE"Be'i+t'.'I¬.sto this fantastic wiii 'fiitrati ar ." it a need for reforms in many spheres. But David Astor. owner and editor of The Sunday Observer, laughs off the social signifi- cance of the story. "As I see it, there is no social meaning in iit," he said. Philby could have deceived anybody. The Rus- sians, like us, recruit their agents among me socially saus- fied segments of their society. It is silly to blame the old boy network. " The "old boy network" is a reference to the tribal confi-- ldence andmutual backscratch-Q i ling said to exist among the; 1 graduates oi exclusive, ciass- oriented British private schools that have traditionally supplied a large percentage of British _iaEE?!=_'l?*' """"' The signiiicanceoi the_PF1ii-f by ures that lS"$!UT!'P'l'ng many Britons was expressedby this week'sSpectator maga- zine. It said: While there are master minds and active bodiel like Phiiby and Blake at ~;work inMoscow, we had better watch out. If they have not factually left some time bombs ibehind they are considering lhow to get them into position I now." " 1 George Blake is another Brit- ish spy, who iast October es- écaped fromWormwood Scrubs iprisonwhere he was servinge A2-year sentence. 1 in the same week that Th! Sunday Times was publishing a picture of Phiiby in Red Square, othernewspapers were publishing pictures of Blake in a Caiitras'ien"!!Pke. Q59

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J D D Past --is ~-~___.Lax Superiors .__.s.______,of.-__-:_-°______Gondy . e isgnised" _ __ __ London Spy Sumter rune: Slipped r " I, LONDQN Haro d Kim i rhillig-s"sen?ev5'n1'en'i:1n'gleithesi acammunist e of s mi begii-lg - ¬oTning headoi the Soviet Englishman with Liberal-to section of the British Secret Conservative opinions. Intelligence Service, while It is still almost impos- himself being a Soviet agent, sible to find chinks in the I must rank as one oi the mask that Kim Philby rst 1....s, J E great proiessional coups in put on when he was 22. the twisted history of There are one or two clues: espionage. His writing was careful and Philby later went on to restrained, and many people higher things when he be- who knew him recall an came the linkman between elusive sense of distance or the SIS and the U.S. Central remoteness. Rarely did he Intelligence Agency, ffm allow himself to be engaged which position he could give in such a way a= to reveal his Soviet spymasters thor- his inner thoughts. ough general knowledge of Had Philby been forced to the operations of both the spend more time in first- major Western intelligence ciass intellectual company agencies. during those 30 ye:-irs,_it is The Washington Post questionable whether he But there is a classic could have kept up the - Times Herald _____L--Bi! quality about the earlier charade. But the ineptitude '' {Ii '5 The Washington NewsDaily _i. achievement. The selection of the British Intelligence . The Evening Stat Washington! L in 1944 of Philby, already s Service helped to make his Soviet agent of more than fantastic career possible. l MUF24'Sunday The Washington! Star ..__. ten years standing as the Because the SIS bureauc- Daily News New York! man to conceive, build and racy was protected by lay- ' _ i » Sunday News New York! ...i_.__ control s new British opera- ers of official mystery, the tion against the Russians is agency was even less pre- //I} _, L! NewPost York an event embodying the- pared than others in the ________1r___'_"__/_ ; The New YorkTimes purest essence of espionage._; British establishment to NOT RECORDED The Sun Baltimore! Well Equipped cope with the mid-20th cen- tury." The Service was g_ 47 I I The Worker How was Philby able to do The New Leader it? caricature First, he was suPerbl.Y ment,and of the establish- iii so this is an ac- ¬_-=5 Haxs The Wail Street journal count of a great breach that .i equipped for the role of spy: opened up the defenses of a His marksmanship was ex- social class, and therefore cellent. his mind was swift the defenses of the nation. The National Observer Philby washprn on New and clear,his nerveswekre Year's Dayr9'i'2""., in imperial People's World strong. Despite some powr- . . , _ - ful drinking, he remained In la. Iron1ca.ly, youg Phil- physically tough and re» byis Indianplaymat%TEl!-" Date __ Q01-__8 195] silient. He was also extreme- named him "Kim" after ly attractive to women. ! the hall-caste bog/Iof the But above-these AKlipling book whose central ' i.-'fl Phiiby had the cap to theme is intelligence work. .- disguisee his _ '1 The boy; father, Harry St. John Bridger Phiiby, was s

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known gs"Jhe atoci:'brol:ers,"the contacts to get that sort the Soviet Union. To Philby who gave the Service its of lob on his own," said one this must have seeiiTed'EEi" connection with 'Wi1ites ultimate opportunity,- and ot his colleagues. I know Club, one of Londons most also to represent the ulti- exclusive men'sclubs. This it was Burgess who rang up mate folly of the men above notorious liaison stands at someone and got him tn. him. - the center of any picture of The Iberian subsectloirs Phii'bys appointmentis a the wartime secret service. theater was a vital one. measure of the blind faith And it epitomizes the Spain was a neutral, friend- in him on the part of his rougish, dilettante quality oi ly to Germany, and provided superiors, whose own repu- MI-6. oti which the rest of the perfect base for opera- tations had been aided by Whitehall, and especially the tions against.Britain's oom- Philby's work.Had Philby's en-ibroyonie professionals of munlcatlons keystone, Gi- early Communist experience MI-5, were to become in- braltar. Portugal was been forgotten? Had -it been creasingly c 0 n t e mptuous friendly to Britain, but obliterated from the 1'Et:0l'ti over the no-at decade. Portuguese Mozambique by his e x cellent perform- Most of the top brass be- was the center of German ance? -Or was it, just con- longed there, including Sir espionage operations in ceivably, noted and, in a mo- Steward Menzies, the MI»6 southern Africa. It was in ment of supreme political chief until 1951 and the this connection that Phllby naivete, ignored? model for Ian Flemin-g'sfic- sent Malcolm Muggeridge j The aging colonel who The etiquette of the time to Lourenco Marques and -.was the sole incumbent of tional security chief "M." Graham Greene to Sierra -the inactive Soviet section was to leave Menzie alone Leone. was pensioned off, and Phil- iby moved in to build an em- with his personal assistant As a boss, Philby was s lpire which, within 18 when they were together, quick success. I-Ie possessed since it was understood that lrnont'ns,_ anoccupied entire both grasp and human sym- floor and employed more ithey were running the pathy, faculties which evi- secret service or something." than loo people. Within two dently Won him intense per- ,years. the section had ac- Whites provided, too, s sonal loyalty. This was to Qcumulaiied8 vast store of in- fertile source for emergency he a feature of his entire iformation onCommunists in wartime recruits, on the career. and it is with an al- Western countries,front or- basic English principle that most unspeakable sense of ganizations a n d the other if you could not trust your irony that associates recall .now-familiar stuff of Cold club, who could you trust? the word which they always War counter-espionage. And As for Menzies himself, felt summed him up: in- ,Kim Philbyhad acquiredthe one former subordinate re- tegrity." lconfidence of his staff. > calls: He was terrifying to "You didn'tjust like him, "Liessax. Ill92II1l"I-92-luau5C»and 4-Iva-c-no|.aa;;| Inup -in gu- work wi b ause he acted admire him, agree with ianything for him," one of entirely instinct. He him," says one man who them has recalled. ~ rarely rea a single case saw him often from the i This witness remembers right thr , yet he often war until his defection. I that everyone there came came in ith the answer." You worshipped him." from a strict security back- aunts Espionaie i By 1943, two years after ground, where the rigid coming in, Philby was firm- tradition. was that ofiice Kim '§>hllpypartly established became as one of desks should be locked at of Section Five oi MI~6 Menzies very best men. night. But Kim broke that which was responsible for But by early 1944 Philby tradition as he broke so counter-espionage, or more was getting bored by the many others. Don't worry exactly. spying on the Ger- limitations of the Iberian about that," he said, I'll man spies. Through per- subsection. * llock them up late-,r._' sonal contact supplied by It was then that Menzies i "I didn'tlike to do it, his old colleague Guy Bur- asked Philby, just a few ilthis witnessnow says.but gess, Philby became head months before D-Day, to re- the was so charming that I oi the Iberian subsection vive the defunct counter- §couldn't 11efuse.anythlnghe ' ust am not have _2"V___esnionaee _'_'* operation' '__' ' i .".'.'.'.".1k_..92___r._.._ acalnst asked." -=_..____=-- 7 -

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Unlt-ed Pren-Internnionnl t-.¢_:..._p HAl1OLD PHILBY <_.;i'-I . . . the Communist disguised as an establishment man.

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./ Tav ,______W rotter ___'..__..._._. Tele. Room ___.._ Holmes _,__i_.______Gandy .i._..__.._ r L, C;IA I "% -'92_92:_:'.! ' E /QR 2&§if§§¥{r 066A A I PHILBYTOLONDON THEEX-WIFE 1o/3OF A UP1!-MASTERFORMER RUSSIAN wxBRITISH HAROLD "KIM" SPY MAT WHO EHILBY9 C D VD TO THENOW IS SOVIET MARRIED1 ' UNIONHE THE YEARDAILY MIRROR REPORTED OLD TODAY.FORNERTOP BRITISH INTELLIGENCE LIVINGOFFICIAL WHOT MIRRORCHICAGO-BORNWENTSAID THE WITH BEHIND 55* THE " IRONMACLEAN CURTAIN1 IN A LUXURIOUS YEARSFOUR MELINDA APARTMENT AGOIS NOW on rm:rm»: OUTSKIRTS YEAR-OLD or APERICAN MOSCOW. waswoman THEWIFE 01-DONALD MACLEAN, __ _WHO51" DEFECTEDTO THERUSSIANS ALONG WITH THE LATE GUYBURGESS» - {MARRIAGE92 THEMIRROR PHILBY BETWEENREPORTEDTHATMELINDA AND DIVORCETHETOOK PLACE OFTHE MACLEANSIN GREAT SECRECYTHE AND Q 52 HIMIN MOSCOW'LAST IN MOSCOWPHIEBT.FORMACLEANSUMMER- WON'T I ASKED ABOUT WASIT AT THEALL, HE DISCUSS REPORTSAID. IHIS WIFE WON'T HAD LEFT % 92| CONFIR;. ORREPORTER: DENYPHILBY'S IT. ! FATHER nnucnranYOUR ELDEST DIVORCED HISJOSEPHINE THIRD2561?: was ASKED ELEANOR LAST YEARA BYmxnnon ANDQg THEN MARRIEDmas. mznxnnnMACLEAN.' , MACLEAN,-1 cannotnzwv AND ITso MISS WIFE,HIS PHILBY wan:wno ANSWERED. MARRIED. 1n LONDON IN 19:9, 2 knnvzoRW755AEDcnxinnzn. A THREE I r_I -~ . "* _ j}!-QK_ _ ao .%£${4tj v-J -92 L!D n :1 ,}4;L 2 '__.. _Vc,,_,92__ H ,Y1 92 - DO ,/ _L - ' _; .f, .f , _ {l'92 I ',~. ""1 I- , !f D.Q /V ':'I . 1'. A UMA" -I ii- ,I I é5..l DEIJ " 1:?

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_ LONDON, Oct. 3 tUPliMas f,fT5r Russianspy Han-id"_Kim" Phi1~b_92'now m-arrivcl is lh_t}he eir'-'92§'ii'eof a former British dip- ;';<.92¢¢~* I lomat who detected to the Soviet Union, the Daily Mirror report- '4~;.-'. ed i.0 l3_92'. The Mirror said the S5~ F /1 -' year-nid former top British in telli-gence official is now iii" with Chic-ago-bornMelinda I ac- I£92_|1L onBl. the outs 0! .J'-. 92 'Moscow. wasShe the Wie of Donald ri'i'92"-F- ' E ' G *Iac[_.ean_ whod6-Iectcd lo the '~ "i Russia-ns along with the late In ! Guy Burgess. / * 1 i TheMirror reportedthat the -- divorceof the MneLeans and ,5 1- _ The ~the marriage between Philby ' ' ' s and Melinda tuckplace ingreat JV] ,- l 1' secrecy Sl surnmer.in 7!if =' / Washington Post Times Herald ------77- The Q I Washington DailyNews __£- TheEvening Star Washington! ___ The Sunday Star Washington! _._.__ REC-'40 Daily News NewYork! _..im.__ :n~£||-1;--3-.-,..,__ Sunday News New York! ____.i__ ti:-roci G New York Post {Fixing "ne New York Times _....._.i-Z The Sun Baltimore! i._...__.i_ The Worker The New Leader _.._._...-.i--i The Wall Street jonrnal _iW-__ » , _ The National Observer _....i.___ _ ~- ! - People's World i .-*W Q '

Ellibyi e TB, _ . . . i r ~ 1-._F|v;';;--*------* -------'"'- ', - i ' r -v e 51??!" t-9.5 _ By HENRY MAULE 1! , _ ,, ,,,_ ' Staff Correspondent of Tun News London,1@~/save Oct.years after British diplomat Harold A. R. Kim hilby was exposed inTHE NEWS ti§t'he "tiiirizl a spy case, he has admitted being a. Soviet agent for more than 30 years. - - -An exclusive dispatch from this correspondent to THE News in 1955 named Philby for the first time as the man who had tipped off British turncoats Guy-"Burgess and Donald MacLeen, enabling them to flee to Russia. ' -' The question was raised in Parliament and Harold Macmillan, 5 then foreign secretary, cienredPhilhy, former first see:-etey of! the Bitish Embassy in Washington, declaring there was no reason ; ofto conclude thiscountry that Mr.to Philby oridentify hashim st any with e. time so-calledbetrayed third the interests man." ~ 1l i Hare Come l-lome, He Tells Son . Philby, 55,has admittedto his oldest son,John, 24,who recent»i L/UIHUULII ._-._.i__.... iy visited him in Moscow, thathis allegiancehas beento the Soviet Mohr Union most of his adult life. ' I have come ho1ne,"'he told the 5oI1,Cleclnrir|ghimself com- pletelyhsppy in Moscow, wherehe ostensiblyworks for a Soviet- Bishop____-._...__ p bljshin house. _, ma; " ,"""' Two inndon newspapers, theObserver andSunday Tnnes,. Ccisper__.______._.e ca,-r..,..inr'|7+f92: _...._-,:._,92 ...... 115:} fin! iv wiserveri ee..eL |_]'!'7 ..!s .imnatc..edI 'i'92 success7 story Ill espionage." 0'--.-; ' Coiiohon __._.___ They reported that Philby was now known to be the most i1n- ~.. .11 ' Conrad ii portant spy the Russians ever had in the Vv'est,and that for more >. .1}.11,.i| t W ._.,.,,._.. than s decade, while serving as s Soviet agent, he was s. trusted Felt senior officer at the heart of British intelligence. ' -ti; ' <,,_ Gale Philby reportedly was assigned by the Russians in 1934 to in- filtrate British intelligence. By 1944 he was appointed head of Bri- Floaen,__....i tish nnti~Soviet intelligence. . Sullivan In On British and U.S. Secrets _ Tovel _..__._.___ He wasnamed todiplomatic postsfrom whichhe wafableto disclose to Moscow the inner secrets of M-16, Britain's counterintelli- ' P. Trotter gt-nee service, and of American Central Intelligence Agency, the newspapers said. He was being groomed to head M-13 and be Bri- Tele.Room tain's linkwith the CXA. - - . t . - ;92 _- - In 1951, Philby risked exposinghis position by warning MacLean Holmes ._...__i that he had just been unmaskedas a major atomic spy, permitting MacLean to flee with his friend Burgess, who since has died. Goody .._..._i_ . Apparently Pliilby did so becausehe suspectedMacLean and Burgess might break down under interrotrntionnnd betrayjhim. . l Philby waslater exposed by s Soviet intelligence officerwho .-1 ii 1.; 2/ |-defected tothe Westin 1961and toldLondon abouthim. Philbyfled i V in 1963 from Beirut, Lebanon.where he was working£0; the Observer and, that paper said, for British intelligence. ..._..k- _-" I - "'- - -"" ',. wt, _;.¢q92f S . ' t s'.- ;-wt. » /iv ;- Q ~ . ll-i<~».- |-I--nlal A D -Pl-eilhtu ..---:..;___;=.___._.. .__-7.--,__ .fhf it: lruc .L______

Ktifn /§- /1~ The Washington Post Times Herald 'Tim in-:1 -'-'-"-"."*».'.1*'~-rwmag; TheI C Washington Daily News ____ 0 i .j . ti

DeLocrch I t Mohr Bishop Casper --i-i..__ Cullcrhcrn 1-.---L...-.k PlrilbyqLONDON, Oct. 2. tUPtl -- 'lhe oDoubIellgentcolleagues andhe was for droppedYears __..._i___i M-ti".ii ' . " -" '-' 2?; aon ofHarold "Kira" Philby, the from the Wadrington assign- -.-._.___. at -, w_ . im , ----;-5-:;:._._.v § .; British spy who defectedto Mos- in cow in 1963. said yesterday his ;.-..;- .- ,. ; meat. father "worked for the Russians -~V7§;_I... 11% 5.2;;.j;; p T3? for 30 years." Philby once was t Slowly.-however, Philhyf-r shouldthinlr heare less -_-_-.__ Britain's chiefliason man in worked his way back into Brit- lonely now." the yoimgerPhilby B Washington with the CIA. . ish confidence. He was sent to g-_. _._ '- -. ' i. . ..- . . ... Philby'sJohn. son M. told a Beirutas a correspondentfor aaid."He'uatlastableto!ive ft... "'*i the British newspaper. theOb- British Broadcasting Corpora- server, one of the two which tion commentary he met his 55 - -=iE""I~r U" " completelyopenly.is a oo He printed anarticle onhis activi- munist and it is a eommunis year - old father in Moscow two .;;_£~92e:.92.._.. ;. .'il". ._ " :I'1;,.~_ '|,ties Sunday. ' weeks ago. "I have come country 'andway oflife." Philh ' '. re observer said it had been was grantedSoviet citizenship. home." he quoted his father as . _- vi i,-5:1; saying. told Philby was no longer in the l Philby's careeras a double - .:-.,. . . 1%; i_.-V :_ :_?.+Ea __lu -s spy business.But hewas alson Beirut as a British counterm- i agent and the circumstancesof KIM PHILBY his discovery and flight have re- pionage agent. mained subject to speculation Franco sideof the Spanish Civil In 1955,former British Prime 1 and controversyin England,but War. ' Minister Harold Machlillan told two London newspapers yester- When World War II broke out, the House of Commons that . day pieced together an account Philb_y'sschool old friends re- Philby wasnot thethird man" of his activities over three dec- cruited him into British intelli- who tippedoff Burgessand Ma- ades that read like an incredible gence andhis career rose rapid- ciean fouryears earlier. spy novel. ly. By the endof 1944 he headed Philby continued his double - if "/!'t'.}il'i - Philby was so successful.by a new counter - espionage de- agent activities until 1961. when these accounts, that at one time partment directed against the a Soviet detector made allega- he was chief of Britain's anti- Soviet Union. tions about his double - agent Soviet sectionand cameclose to In 1917, Philby was named background and long history being namedhead of the entire Chief of British Intelligence in with the Soviet spy system . British counter intelligence net- Turkey and two years later he Philby, still working asa corre- l worlr. MI - 6. before his luck ran beaded theWashington staff. spondent inBeirut; ed to Mos-l cow in 1963 when informed that "1 r Times Herald rnasqueraded asit pro - Nazi Philby immediately came un-I The WashingtonDaily NewsIt journal|st_a nd rn reported fromthe der suspicion fro his tua_r;im_e I 7 77 Li iirii -j:-£;i- r_ _7_: --J Ti" Evwins Star Washington! _ The Sunday Star Washington! ____ -.._.. . _._. _, ! 3, f-- -. Daily News New York! -_.._..-.__.i .i '92_1'. ._T__;;|v ..4-=-._ ,1'_. v'.'|1I.-JJLJ -_ ' 5lm<1av News New York! 1553 ti.-E;if 6 I-L4] New York Post ?% § TTIC NEWYOIR T111135i-..-_.-..-.i I-1--_. ¢---_-.n- g_-"'7 .1 The Sun Baltimore! ----_---B The Worker r ti Thc New Leader 1-J " ~ r The Wall Street Journal -st.-~t'r " Tht National Observer i.i._._..._i. - 92 People's World 54.0ori;o_:;.iaBYp6 ' _.?@.;/3~ Date J0 " o é 7

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l /1! _.92 l £4 olson _i_.i_ 0~2n7-27-57! Rev. 0A {_ -'~ . Ch F4

asper .____._._ Callahan __...... i - Conrad ._._.i. Felt __...... _.__.. Gale Sullivan Tavel._...__._....._ Trotter V Tele. Room __._._. Holmes ___...__. " Gandy __....._.i..._

. I _, 1 -'../"

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E uP1-A2LONDON-~BP.ITAIN'S SPY! SERVICEFACEDA RIGOROUS TODAYCHECK-UP SECRET 1 FOLLOWINGago %§%gA£Né%sg%§NLé§$DISCLOSURE THE gé;HTHAT A EoHMEHZHEEgg.CENTRAL TOPINTELLIGENCE INTELLIGENCEAGENCY, OFFICIAL TA}-M3§"i%"AGOHHTL- woAH1Mb T9<i§'1-@§3§°A?TT%%L%Z§§§3'éDPRé?1%E%A5¥§oJ%sYEARE' AsAHEw§$APEHl §3B§1.B?§ CORRESPONDENTTOLD RECENTLYHIM IN MoscowHE HAD BEENSPY A FORTHE RUSSIANSsiHcE 19:3. sov1ETIT wAsREPORTED INTELLIGENCETHAT HTMONLY EEM PHILBY A MoHTHs MowAETEH 55 HAS HE RECRUITEDLEFT CAMBRIDGE BY UNIVERSITY.INTFLLIGENCEHE LATER MAs AND BECAME sLATEn To EEcoMESENIOR A HEAD OFFICERor M16 IN BRITISHBEFORE HE MAs FIRED. iHEoHMEn SOURCESSAIDTHAT PHILEY RECRUITEDBURGESS cuv AND DONALD MACLEANAS SOVIET AGENTS 1933 IN WHILETHEY WEREWORKING FOR THEBRITISH FOREIGNSERVICE HE ANDTIPPED THEM OFFTHAT THEY HAD BEEN DISCOVERED.BURGESS MACLEAN AND nETEcTEnIN T951.MACLEAN STILLIN LIVES Moscow.BURGESS THERE. 10/4--TDIIOQAEDA - DIED {

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~ Bared as LONDON UPI! Britain: . P l1Secret Service today faced a V '! s Fir! . rigorous check-up after the 5 K, " .+ . idisclosune that a former top l intelligence official and Britaius . .. 11: .:_i'; 155.: 1:» , . p " - ,;:»f-. =2-=-.1 1;; " i ;i-'- top link with the U.S. Central .-.§'t-_. ._ I 92.. . ._ r.;._.-. >,_;.' .3 3; -_| -l . - 92;,.;--5 - intelligence Agency, had been a ~ '<'- .= --r . - Russian spy for 34 years. ;i;$=;,.. - . -" .92 3 John Philby bold radio and .p5,'{;_ . ._ l_ _ .;. ¢..-;._ .--:-»_92 . _.' television audiences that his l - . lather, Harold Kim! Philby, W 1 " ;who vanished from Bcirutlour - ;,.A . <1 '- ='-=. years ago while working as a . p. .; ;,= ;'_.-.,- ,:.-5.-j - s __ - newspaper correspondent. told .:.;.-1;. .;.;. ff i -. _ ' " him recently in Moscow he had -=.»>~--..¢--_.=;- '";j."-_- "- .1 <1; I a spy for the Russians *i;g:;_x<;;;j.;_:;.V_ -i"5¥§.iI= -- " F? . ', e iii;>;r;. si c1933. .*--stirs-==¥~.!-'r:-= :5§ét_:;;;92-5-;;;.Ig:' . ,; r-. ;--=naw-':--'==.- - ._=.-L -- " 4; '- was reported that Kim '1' .- ~e§';'.<>_-_, . 2 I.":;-52.13 J, new 55, had %en re :§£1.Z'II'*.". .;_;. :; I. ' . Q _ ;_£'_ *3 ;-..92:--- A 7- _, " "' ted by Soviet intelligence Q; -I. nu. ,1 . -.?.i="isz=E ly a few months after he left CambridgeUniversity. He later 2.111": . -' .1 . -became a senior officer in '+ 3 . -- British intelligence and was jlslated to become head of M16 . Li" ''.- ';-v":' '3 . -- ii. --13;, , . ;before he was Iired. _ _ <1. :-: . 9 informed sources said that .= --a .92.' . Philby recruited Guy Burgess nnnotn KIM - in Land Donald Maclean as Soviet _:______..§J-- {agents in 1938 while they were working for the British Foreign sion you could draw 'that he lservice and he tipped them oil}did it for ideological reasons." Mohr ____-_---- "that they had been discovered. Fhiiby said his father isnowl Bishop___._.__.._ Burgess and Maciean defected lworking in Moscow as a journal- 'Casper _._.__-____ in 1951. Maclean still lives in ist and is free for the first time " Moscow.Burgess died there. in 34 yea-rs to think and speak Collohun .____-- Philby visited his lather in fneely a-nd being rewarded Conrad Moscow recently. lexcellently for those many "I admire him very much,"1years service to communism." Philb said. For what he did;, I am absolutely convinced - icoul not have been easy-and and it is obvious -- that he is a Gnie the d it very well. He worked Communist and has served the ilor e Russians for 30 years communism of Soviet Russia for Rosen 34 years, ever since he left -:4 ..i .....,..:..: _ . . _ ..u.:_... 1-.. WILIIJUL IULUIVUIB ariyumig luf iCi_1ibF1dE§ ir1l933 Sullivan .it. There was only one conclu-. _ .Alt.hough fdoinot-d'isapprove[Yea rs 1 Tovel of what he has done, Iltnowhc Trotter .__.___-.- did not enjoy abusing hispos1- Tele. Room tion or his friendships as a spy. When I saw him in Moscow, Holmes _.___-_ he was being treated excellent- Gundy ly, as one would expect to be n treated for that service, a vary important person, a VIP." Marcus Lipton, the Labor member of Parliament who in .. neg, 1955 named Philby as the third /! 0 :9 Q j-,| man" in the Burgess and Ma- I clean affair, said last night, "There must be many red_laces in the Foreign Office and in our security services now . . . It MW. the Foreign Office eight years discover that I was right . . They and the Secret Semir- In behaved with incredible stupidi- ty in going to all lengths to clear him." 92 .- C, 92

/ DoL.ooch - l Mohr l l Piiiihof!----_-__-_ t Cosper Ccillohon ' TOLDHIM THIS SAYS SEN ----:w -:--v- if----i ::V-- -w-_ Conrod

tonnon, on. - The Felt son ofHarold "Kim"Philly, the Britis'lT.37'whoto Mos- delec cow in 1963, said yesterday his tether worked for the Russians Gale * Pliilby a Double!p"92_!-gcyo-921-,-3;:-'_ _ _ _ _ . ._ ._. ---c-.-1'Went for 30 11*-"~= . ,.- i -''/1--.=--:~zi.i==.i-=5 K =-- for M years." Philby once was -. a r Britain's chiefliason man in =:.'¬J >-=- '*'i colleagues andhe was dropped . »' Washington withthe CIA. 1 --_,".1, . - ,.;=_. A-j from the Washington assign- Pl1ilby'sJohn, son 2-t, told a rnent. Ftosen -2.-; -o, ,3, -_'~.=,'ir-2 British Broadcasting Corpora- A _ ,.;.., __ ;-.. Slowly, h o w e v e r . Philby 92l|I'rIvl|.924fr;-ul l92'"-4 I¢ wlunu; hantr-nu. ---avintn Rrii -.-an - tion cornrnentaryhe mot his 55- .-4. - Q5. year - old father '11Moscow two ish confidence. He was sent to week s ago. l have come Alll N 92.. Beirut as I correspondent for Sullivan._aa.._._._._ home," he quoted his father as " the British newspaper the Ob- i -.. g W.i server, one of the two which saying. ,' --., ' - - .~... :_ =-.<; -it-is printed an article on his activi- ties Sunday. Tovel '.§,'-.<.""1-1-H-:= -».".--;-~';;-I"-''-"tit.- -. . .- -' -.."1 -5-1? =El92--.=.1.:- -i92-- .I. ' i '- Philby'scarata double as- , _ The observer said it had been agent and the circumstances of it L Q j told Philby was no longer in the Trotter .1-we-i his discoveryand flight have re- * §=§:i:5 ''. '3YE" Q--oi " spy business.But. he was alsoin Tele. Room _.___._.._ Beirut as a British counteres- mained subject to speculation KIM PHILBY L.|.-.'l.-...-.a- and controversyin England. but pionage agent. rlULlliC'D two London newspapers yester- Franco sideol the Spanish Civil In 1955, former British Prime day pieced together an account Minister Harold Machlillan told Goody of his activities over three doc- War. the House of Commons that ades that read like an incredible Philby was not the "third man" spy novel. WhenWorld I1 War brokeout, who tippedoff Burgessand Ma- Years Philby was so successful,by Philb_ys oldschool friendsre- clean four years earlier. these accounts, that at one time cruited him into British intelli- Philby continued his double - "I should think he is far less he was chief of Britain's anti- gence antlhis carccr rose rapid- agent activitiesuntil 1961,when lonely now," the younger Philby Soviet section and came close to ly. By the end of 1944 heheaded a Soviet defector made allega- said. lie is at last able to live being namedhead of the entire a new counter - espionage de- tions about his double - agent completely openly.He is a com- British counter intelligence net- partment directed against the background and tong history munist and it is s communist work, MI - 6, before his luck ran Soviet Union. with the Soviet spy system. country andway oftiled ihitby In 1947, Philby was named Philby. still working as acorre- was grantedSoviet citizenship out. Chief of British Intelligence in spondent inBeirut, fled to Mos- Turkey and two years later he cow in 1963 when informed that u Philbygraduated Cani- headedfrom the Washington staff. a case was being compiledit against him. bridge University in 1933. One Phitbys closest brush with t .f/" __ year later he began a long ca- discovery camein 1951when he Philby's saidsm his father reer with Soviet intelligence by tipped oft two Soviet spies that now was working tor a Russian bec0ming'courier. a He soon their activities had been uncov- news agencyon tar eastern af- t/" /r graduated tohigher level Soviet ered. British atomic spy Donald fairs. iitelligence work. . Mactean andagent GuyBurgess During theno 19305, Phitby were able to flee to the Soviet t"- X A 92 mas ueraded as a pro - Nazi Union because of Philby'swarn- kJ~ 5/,_¥ "' lg /Daft:_ 7»-an ,,,l 7 ' '§'i7l7tt'£tltSlreported fromthe ing. and l i""""- ---u-Q ll 1-0:-n Philby immediatelycame un- der suspicionfrom his The Washington Post ll Times Herald i . /pg.. J»' v92>-. The WashingtonDaily News P The Evening Star Washington! ...___ i The Sunday Star Washington! ___ ire; Daily News NewYorki - Sunday News New York! W New York Post C C

92 - - 92 1't

rt I f92 l t U V" L. . IUCDJHIMJHIS,says s9_g_g_ -- - i 92- Philbyt o LONDON, Oct. 2. ttiPll -- The son-of Harold"Kim" Philby. the British spy Mm detectedto Mos- cow in 1963, said yesterday his father worked for the Russians for 30 years." Philby once was Britain's cliietliason man in Washington withthe CIA. _.---, -1 -1 all, Hutoys son John, 2|, roiu a British Broadcasting Corpora- tion commentaryhe met his 55 - year - old father in Moscowtwo weeks ago. "I have come home, he quoted his father as saying. t Phitbys careeras a double - agent andthe circumstancesof KIM PHILB-Y his discoveryand ight have re- _ ¢ " mained subject to speculation Franco sideoi the Spanish Civil and controversyin England, but War. two London newspapers yester- When World War II broke out, day pieced togetheran account Philbys oldschool friendsre- oi his activities over three dec- cruited him into British intelli- ades that read like an incredible gence andhis careerrose rapid- spy novel. ly. By theend oi 194-t heheaded Phil-by was so successful,by a new counter - espionage de- these accounts. that at one time partment directedagainst the he was chief of Britain's anti- Soviet Union. Soviet section and came close to In 1947, Philtiy was named being namedhead of the entire Chiet of British Intelligence in British counter intelligence net- Turkey andtwo yearslater he work, Ml - 6, betore hisluclr ran headed theWashington start. out. _ _ Philby's closestbrush with Philby graduated from Cam- discovery camein 1951when he bridge Universityin 1933.One tipped ofttwo Sovietspies that year later he begana long ca- their activities had been uncov- reer with Soviet intelligenceby ered. British atomic spy Donald becoming a courier. lie soon Maclean andagent GuyBurgess graduated -tohigher levelSoviet were able to flee to the Soviet Union becauseof Phiiby'swarn- '1-itelligence work. ing. ' ' . During the late 1930s, Philby or-.=:;.:.cs-Jed a aspro - Nazi Philby immediately came un- journalist andraortm lrom the der suspicioni-ro§i'irla"kniBrican --1.. cicr C er T .._..__.__.._ Callahan _____i Conrad Felt -.- 92I .92 '92_,- - n n .-I-, . - - . - .4 __ . - . __I . 92- _. .-~ ", _ _ 1 .1- _- 'f" 4.5-'..a....a.. -'. _, __,?§~.'L....-,1. -In. F. - _,_/. -- ;=l'ii.iE'.'.'.;.:..I..4i.._ai:.n.fl..T..'..¬.ii,t.:".!l"~-r * , _'' ..-or,_kit .5; -'92_ "Gate _ An, '_!. .e Rosen - Stltltvdn I Tctvel .._._...... _.. -'92 Dc-Loach _____e..___ Mohr __..:_..___ C C Bishop ' Casper ____..._._. Callahan .____..___ ' Conrad ._._...____

92 I <1 1R1-aparton Pl1i]]_1!'_, LONDON -> Harold Phil- . l bys son confirmed that his lfatherbeen hadby recruited Felt __.____._i___ 1, the Soviet secret service early in the 19305,years be- Gale i fore he joined British in- telligence androse toits top Flosen___._.___ ranks. A Sullivan __._._.-_- The London Observer and the London Sunday Times both printed page-one art- Tavel icles y e s t e r d a y detailing .a Thi1bys double rnie. The Trotter:_.___._ son. John Philby, sai;.l_.th.&_l Tele. Room ___.._ when he saw his father in Moscow, where the spy de- Holmes __._.___._ jected heafter walrposed, Gandy ___..______.- 92lthe comehome." elderPhilby "I've geld,/ - A -

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I .';' '.ll If l nnconnen TheTimes Washington HeraldPost_,'.._i £7 / _ l 6 1967 The Washington Daily News __ __ -4 The Evening Star Washington! _.. The Sunday Star Washington! ___ Daily News New York! ___.._i___ Sunday News New York! ____i._ New York Post __i_____,____i_ The New York Times ______.__ The Sun Baltimore! ______i__ The Worker The New Leader _._ _ ....__._ The Wall Street journal ii. .. The National Observer ______Ze.__ People's Worldi____.,_.i_.._

-1 Date __ Tr

1' J 92 _4,. U " ,.!'.! . J W, Q Cl I 1 4--- Q 1-21-on /_92_92. JP-'!92/" Olsogc S?O Cos er __.__...___ Col ohon i_._._ Conrad . Felt ;// 1 32:; Sullivan Tqvel _ Trotter .i, Tele. Room ___._ Holmes .i___.._ ' Candy _.i._

9

213A PHILBY 10/1 Mx NIGHT- BY EDMARD LD SHIELDS T! - LONDON UPI!--THEson or RARDLD 9KlM:mRR1LBY,THE BRITISH SPY MR0 DEFECTEDT0 MOSCOW IN 1963*sAID SUNDAY HIS EATRER"WORKED FOR THERuss1AMs FOR 30 YEARS. PHILBY ONCEwAs BRITAIN'SCHIEF ké2£gM MQMATMWASHINGTON AMERIcA's MITR INTELLIGENCE CENTRAL PHILBY'SJOHN, soM 2A, TOLDA BRITISH DRoADcAsT1Mc coRR. sac: coMMEMTARY SUNDAYHE MET HIS 55-YEAROLDFATHER INMoscow Two WEEKS Aco."1 HAVE coME RDME~ RE QUOTED HISFATHER As sAY1Mc. PHILBY'SAs cAREERA Douois-AREMT AMD TMEc1RcuMsTAMcEs HIS or DISCOVERY AMDFLIGHT RAvEREMAIMED SUBJECTTo SPECULATION AMD CONTROVERSYENGLAND, IN BUTTwo LONDONNEWSPAPERS SUNDAYPIECED TocETRER AMACCOUNT orHIS AcTIv1T1Es ovER TRREEDEcADEs THAT READ LIKE AM INCREDIBLE SPY NOVEL. RR1EDv.MAsso SUCCESSFUL BY THESEAccouMTs TMAT AT DME TIME HEMAs CHIEF or BRITAIN'SAMT:-sov1ET sEcT1oMAMD cAMECLOSE AT0 BEING MAMED READor THE ENTIRE BRITISHcouMTER INTELLIGENCE METMDRR MI-6 DETDRE HISLUCK RAMOUT. TRE éR1T1sRFOREIGN OFFICEDECLINED coMMEMToM THE RERoRTs AMD SAIDIT WOULD RAvE NOcoMMEMT T0 MAKE AT ANY LATER DATE. IN 19Ao, PHILBY REcAMECHIEF or BRITISH INTELLIGENCE-IN WASHINGTON AMDWORKED CLOSELYWITH BOTH THE c1A AMD THEFEDERAL BUREAU or INVESTIGATION FRI!. PHILBY GRADUATEDFROM cAMDR1DcEUNIVERSITY IN 19:3. ONE YEAR LATER HEBEcAM A LONG cAREER MITRSOVIET INTELLIGENCEBY REcoM1Mc A couR1ER. HE sooM GRADUATED T0 HIGHER LEVEL sov1ET INTELLIGENCE sMoRR._ . Dm_____~-s_w__-. A

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I ANDDURING THE REPORTED_FROMLATE THE FRANCO PHILBY 19306sxnz or THE SPANISH MASQUERADED.ASACIVIL wAR. PRO-NAZI JOURNALIST A l wuzn NORLDWAR II snoxs our PHILBY'SOLD scnoon FRIENDS RECRUITED HIMINTO BRITISHINTELLIGENCE ANDHIS CAREER ROSE 'RAPIDLY.THE BY ENDOF 19AMHE HEADEDA NEWCOUNTER-ESPIONAGE DEPARTMENTT IN 19AT, PHILBYDIRECTEDwAsAGAINST NAMED CHIEF THESOVIET BRITISHorUNION. INTELLIGENCEIN TURKEY ANDTwo YEARSLATER HEHEADED THEWASHINGTON STAFF. [ PR1LBY'SCLOSEST BRUSHWITH DISCOVERYCAMEIN 1951 wuzn us ITIPPED ovrTwo SOVIETSPIES THAT THEIR ACTIVITIES HADBEEN 1 sunczssauwcovsnso.WERE_ABLE BRITISHATOMIC FLEE spvTHEDONALD To MACLEANUNION BECAUSESOVIET ToANDAGENT cuv or A92PHILBY'S PHILBYIMMEDIATELY WARNING. UNDER SUSPICION CAME FROM HISAMERICAN COLLEAGUESHE AND WAS DROPPED FROMTHE WASHINGTON ASSIGNMENT. SLOWLY HOWEVER,PHILBY WORKEDHIS WAY BACK INTOBRITISH CONFIDENCE.BRITISH NEWSPAPER HEWAS THE SENTTO OBSERVERA BEIRUTONE AS A CORRESPONDENT THEOF TWOWHICH PRINTEDFOR THEAN ARTICLEON HIS ACTIVITIES SUNDY. §¬gN%USINESS.THE OBSERVERSAIDHEIT HAD WASALSO BEENIN BEIRUTBUT TOLD PHILBY AS A BRITISH WASNO LONGER COUNTERESPIONAGEIN THE IN.1955 FORMERBRITISH PRIMEMINISTER HAROLDMACMILLAN TOLD THE A HOUSE COMMONSOE THAT PHILBY WAS NOTTHE "THIRDMAN WHOTIPPED & .OFF PHILBYBURGESSCONTINUED MACLEANDOUBLE-AGENT HIS YEARSAND FOUR ACTIVITIESEARLIER.UNTIL 1961awnsw A SOVIET DEFECTORMADE ALLEGATIONS ABOUT HISDOUBLE-AGENT xcnguwo BA AAsANDA connzspownutr LONGHISTORY IN BEIRUT WITHTHE SOVIET FLED spy SYSTEM.MOSCOWT0 PHILBYIN 1965 wnzwSTILL WORAING INFORMED WHAT'PRILBYSCASE A wAsBEINGSAID sow HIS COMPILEDFATHER AGAINST NOWwAs WORKING HIM.FOR A IRUSSIAN PI SHOULD NEWSAGENCY THINKHE onFAR Is FAR EASTERN LESSLONELYAFFAIRS. - NOW§THE YOUNGER *5PHILBYA COMMUNIST SAID."HEAND IsAT LASTIs IT A COMMUNIST ABLE ToLIVE conLETELYAND OF COUNTRY OPENLY.wAy HgLIFE. ILBY.1:-13 WASFEDGRANTED 22 SOVIET CITIZENSHIP.

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Mohr _.i_-- 6 ~ Bishop Casper "izoilid on P a ers T race Philb s Rise i on Callahan _?-..- Conrad p " y T l Gale .._-__-i- I British Intelligence Soviet_as Spyl Zflifit, l Tovel _-______-- lMel= t0 The Wuhlnston Post Times,. ,, he defended himself. In late 1961, however, infor- '0 N L D O N, Sept. 30--Thebrilliantly Burgess died in mation became available thei ]London Observer and the Lon- 1963 Observer says from a Soviet Trotter don Sunday Times tonight re- In 1955l D Philby was publicly I detector: the Sundly Times cl cared' by Prime Minister Te.-ie.Room .___.___ "veaied what both claimed, H -' H , . "aroia Tviaciviiilan and a yeari Holmes +...____..._ were exclusive ls of the later the Observer, acting on: says from eounterspy George careerHaroimlhilby, of assurance a-thePhliby thatBlake! wasi that made it impossihiei Gqndy _ lSoviet spywho penetratedthe 92°l°3"" 3 3°"°"m°"t agent»for Phiiby to deny he was a I ' ' S very heart of British intelli- ent him to Beirut as their Soviet agent. At the end, says Middle East correspondent. gence. i. the Observer. Philby admitted i 'Philby.who ed to MoscowBut, the two papers say, Phil- to seeinghis contactin the from Beirut in 1963, was re- by had never been taken off Russian Embassy once s, cruited into the Soviet spy the government payroll and month. system -in1933. at age22 and, hoped to work his way back On Jan.23, 1963.he cl,I according to the Sunday and says the Observer, "B it- ,,'_li_|-nes,given was only one ish authorities either wo d job--to penetrate British in- into the Intelligence Service. not, or could not stop him. elligcnce. 1 This Phiiby did in 1941 after; , erving as a- correspondent} or the London Times in pain and as I minor official; in several secret departments ;of the British gnvernrrlent, 1 During World War II. his position' thein Intelligence Service known as Mi-6! grew ,to such an exienl that he was fat one time tinned as 3 nos- gsihle future chief of the Serv- Fice. 1 In 1944. say the two papers, ;Philb_v was selected to head la new section of MI-6 devoted The WashingtonPost _ to counter Soviet espionage I laetivities, the Sunday Times Times Herald lrfprts, andhis unsuspectingl The Washington Daily News _i_ lBritish superiors even gave The him permission to play the part of a double agent with The Russians. <1-e~ ti» We/5 /at I . In 1949. Phiiby was sent to """""'I-i Sund Evening Stat washirlgtn! _.__...... Washington to serve as British NOT R New Sunday Star Washington! Z? liaison with the CIA and FBI. 199 OCT When the Russians exploded TheDaily News New York! __._.._._..-- ltheir first atomic bomb in The ay News New York! I949, the Observer says. Philby fork ?ost land his staff worked day and New York Times night for tour days coding and % idecodine and transmitting TheSun Baltimore! »_ vital British and American ex- Worker V changes. i Philby's cart-er came to a TheNew Leader _._...... __._..._..__ halt in I95} when two of his The Wall Street journal ycloscst colleagues. Guy D. Bur- The National Observer gess and Donald MacL.ean. fled to Russia. He was ordered People's World_.._.i-_---W--_ to return tn London for a se- .e_::f__tf_i_§l where, Date e tit! ilth ______,... says thiel on 1 _. ¢9~i/J L;,.;i l - Til ' '/{._?'.r"§r , ~= 92..-- J 92-1* __ __ ._.7;__:__ _ ______j "_ __ 7 I '' ____ l I-'-" - , 1 . 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i __ activity in the Middle Eiwt. No doubt similar suspicions will a-ttacli to the new Russan centre. 01' course a great deal of Biake '_'useful academic work ll done at 4 such institutions quite uncon-~ I activities neetedwith which any are carrlintelleigeigoei it lémall. without the knowledgeri, ol £ ri 'ncip al. 1 * The ussian centre is under indicate pnqe, riuiiie of the auspices oi the Russian newspaper, city and stain.! Cultural Exchange Institution, nd , which has been granted per- ties missionto ozien by the an Arabic Syrian languageauthori- school ii Bludan. 18 miles from Damascus. "EVENING STANDARD" 2! The British centre is at Philhy Shamlnn. across the border in London, England the Lebanon. A:-cording to reliable sources in Damascus the head of the Arabic lanfunge section of the l school wil be George Blake. 1 sensation It is said that Blake received 92l l.-. . .. .___92, , ' JUN KIMGHE =. .. , ._;5. _; _ _ _ - V, An extraordina ry .;;,~;,_.. ° 1 i = =;.-_ . V 1 . _new development We :_ . in the careers of ?:'%$=-. .= U double agent George is» »T ,...B1ake and _I§_i___n'i_ lee -- -- .. . l j'Pl!,i_l.by., t h e third ' _ . , man in the Burgess l - ' ' -_ 1 - x? I and Maclean case 9 is 7 I-If f ' . .,_i _ 92I .,. 92 ? l Q now reported from '"ozone: star: I Damascus. _ Soviet citizenship lust month _ . I 1 They are both to be on the and permission to live in Syria. - stall of a new Russian cultural The l_iistory_department will centre in Syria. Previously they have Kim Phiiiiy on its staff. were both on the staff oi I lie 15 reported to have arrived Date: i British cultural centre in the in Damascus last week in Lebanon. Frtparaii he Soviet school.for the opening oi . The British centre was Joining ilicm will be two well- r ooiiunonly regarded_ by the itnown Iraqi $ofeS&ol'$| one oi Arabs and the Russians as L wiiioni is Dr. ousslf Ezziiiln, a centre for British intelligence noted authority on Arab history, who is at present Professor of : = i -- - r_, l ._-I-,'-t-':'.Y.4.-'iI":' - =-.-i-- " - i '.. May 12, 1967 ' '.- ."i'I-I5:=L*:.I!t,'1I'==¥:ij;% -: 1?-it .:. -'-. e HistoryIn addition at to Banded tie Russian Universitg.sta . Ii. .z~i.'i-; '»" ?_:-.-.-:-;-_~i=i: 1_:;-W.-1 eight Egyptian. six Syrian and Edition: - _ 'i .-.~ =- two Lebanese academics have also been engaged. i.,,h,.,,, Jon Kimche The opening ceremony for the Editor Bludan oenti-e is to be on June _ 15. It is to be conducted by he Title: GEORGE BLAKE '--Vt? _, , =. »- . '~ " Soviet Professor Kolikhov. vl-Eho 3 5. ".._92.__. -. t . _ . 1" 'l _. ===' '-'&,_92"».="-5: ~ - 6.? ' is due to arrive toeether with _, i. -.';=¢=:-.-' ._l.i-I-aHT __3 th-nee as llct unnained Soviet 1 t =15: -;'iI_. -..-,.-;.',_,_,< ' E-QCQZ5-9292':-'_I..Eé,'|Orient-iiliists. ~ -2 .; lE4:'1'.lI:,:'_:" '- 25+-I . .1 F1 - »-:=_.:"- ~. -- " _.';.g'1 Character: - I .-.,;'.92__~;-. xi ;_ i__§'_~----my '- i-1. |i___,. .. , . _'£-7.q""ii..l '-.=;'-.-'.r:t5.-"o'-'.". ' .. OI _ 1 __ KlM_Pl-HLIY; I Classification:; - ___ HQ... 11' 92 *' i 'Subrnliiinq Oiiice: I-londorn - i 92 p Q2; """-~ 6l.T¢-'_/L/_f"-»'------1 92 N01" Pr-rroniiinl 92_ i *1 '2 if é ,__-- / 1!,, /> ii'l;'l92l' I32 -i...-p19$] .92 , I.1. _ l i t!924#i -92. . r » ~ ~ . _.i r_- t » "-3 *1, *~----_-__ ..r._ r_ - ~ ¢ * J 92 92tn _ » ~- 1__»._m,_k_ [;;;;f'fTaism-1 ___ 92:- - M r. l6¢L.'neh I Q; '-_lPD-350 u-J-521 C-92J. _ 92

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;. _ tr .. .~ '- Ii.-92R !i.i! KIM" l1iii.i§Y --the former l5r1tis.1 l_i1!iO- mut and juuruaiisl .~s:1|1i 10 F-- have been tiIli]!lO!' 11! :t1a , 5? r92 Musc09292' news :1{_{enc_y sinrre I-11'. "1'-wet ...... _.. fir. ',i'=~ -1te1'....._.._ his detection to 1ius.~.ia_1n ,/ 11163--is, 1n fact, 9292'0rk111g 1%/géie A Teie. Room .... ._.._ for Soviet Itiiciligurice. 2 I-t..:.: H--l=.if.!._.._- This is one or a number or I-inns G:mdy____..... iniportatnt pieces of new 1r:io;'- nxittien about Philby that 1'.-'i.1 be . .. _------I--n-n-0-----i I revealed in a beck J v.':"iTt"-n. $43 [H-92 tilifd Vfift, .92new being? lira. L;.<-1:1 »:' ihilby_ hu '.1:;.iL :1-; i Indicate paqu, name of has rezuaiued sit;-:xL ;.;.>:!¢'~.:".-inrrii;.12nl;L nor """IP¢PIl', cliy Gnu diam-1 hu.~'i;:md, is writing; the beak In 92"O::1t.1l'iCHOi.'1 with l1t1ii.O:' i:".!rir'ic W Scale, who knew I'i1iiby per.-scnzuly. 92 A ,, Q. | .' t/I, . 1 ' ~- '1 ;' r Kim Philby was the " third / / man" who tipped 01; Donald_ Itiaeiezm and Guy Burgess, e:'|:1.b1tni; Lhr-:21 to {ice 1.0 Rtisq-flit in 1951. izra tr/7 I1, 41," 7 " /1 One of -the 2i....92D115 why Mrs. ; i I,'hil'uy has nit-euied to it-Ii the true .~ wry is to vicar 11-.-rel! of .-".u;;ges- | 4/>~»__f_-_éX i 'ilu';i.'~'- "mt she 92a*.1.~; corzntcxncl with t 'Ne@Bremen '1rr hu.{n:1nd's r.~'pim*.t1;':-. --|.-. Solve nienths r92i;.:1' 116 MAY 8 seer pp»-;tred ircm U-L'!ruti:1 1 i t-lie Joined him in Mn.-.1-ow wht 'Li:i~_y lived tu,;CLh:1 for Li :.'1r.-:.ih$.. -mi.- --i i!urinj: this time, 192!..=._ £'i.lih3ri sttw tor he-1-.~¢.-it the sort. or Hie Zed by the small b..m! 0: 92.'r-sterni actuators behind the Iron Curtain. k In 1955, she seprimicd I:-om her . t0_..-..------~£¢4¢§@éL-*' hu.~b:".n.i mini went. to live ;t1 Irci.'u:cl. Geri? g Sm M Lhc Ih'92'tI1fIt92'D the 1'iZl-wbll lo: i!1!.92_ b mm You 2.-.1. the story will .:;;'-1.1111 that Phiihy Lad fmmd :92r.r1:h{'r wnmftn ¢1 ta E5 ------l --' in I-Iii:-:»!:i aim an mm-11|'.92:x. 11 ' _ ,.--- Alihpugzh Eiezuzur Hiiiug: is now by ___ A_ _d.[-3:--m P"-" no . longer in _w:1ch with he: i n h_us:Jend_ she In-20.5 the bunk | S11I"92lid nc-lzhcr b1:1:r..~ nor - DeeEdition: 4/he/e7 n:-:~.:se him I-wr ~.1.-int. he cEi.: 4 Author: bi is t'{92 L1! NU t, 1'11 I, K i i . 1ltI92time he -: Li;:;:: i "1 to :1r:cn:nn Cdliur: tr i . L. .'1n".' ' ;'.- . it TIIIB: sh.m=d hat n':=,.:'a92'ate A:1;;ie- ui I ;5u92'iu'tI£l;ttiu1i:i. he 92'.':1:= , ,-."..r"-.r."iL ":1 in this 4I ri:m:',vr0i:.: :::';.1c 1'11 lrhllf zurti RUssEU£3PH1LBY The story will 02:11! tin hu-A?ermnier-bl92|1i'. ll :11; "1 I -11 im ':m.u'. ;n~1-.-mhal92'.'L'1iI.| and why Philby became a life was cun'pH:::-.ir-Q by n. " t:;'|.lLO!. h92t'1l'3 of 1:1:-i.rl:1:-"¢-5 unci Character; I It wilt disriuse how-he was aifnirs. :1.» well 0:; bouts 0! I1 recruited by the aicoiiolmn. ,, _, Clq:;niI|.r-qlnnn: uesians while sit}! an und:-rgr:idu:1te at. Cambridge $1-llifgllyllnq our.-= London 111 the thirties. BUFILE 65553043 The book will trace hi;__, K _ .7 i wp-_= an--t.-= -.1 .. -,.. .7,-=-- 5l::1t1Hi'm£'niiS ._, _ _, _ careers ___ as 3 ~ W Ti 1 - ~ 'rm:-"--r"-* ' '_.-p '1:21:-1ii.'192nr:e niiicer J '19: r . J? ; . 4 vi i:-nth Bri-.ni:1 - - and .,Jw_%¢¥,,*, I211-;.<£c.. /d{{ IF "I U ,,q _'jV<-'C4""- @f#57%M F m~.,= :'*..*92ltis '~' *"~zcnce r tlzougiit*1=;va:eee§%§z§:5@~:eaetzhu =2'r } hie . s 2 rtm__, that _ an _ one______My,1! . 51;! J ' ., If _

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indicate pczqe, nml oi wife reieets l newspaper, city and liuim} £40,000 . ---. hf hook offer i '1. l ._._ "Daily Express" Express Staff Reporter » RS. ELEANOR PHILBY. 92 fe Kioi hlib "Third th e E Forei Man"n 92 ht ho w became a spy, yesterday turned down s. £5-10.000 oer tor her " story -tollowinz a phone i call trom Russia. London, England The call was from her hus- and to her smaii £5-a.-week at in Dublin. Afterwards she contacted her London solicitors instructing l LL . C N them to break o arrange- ments Ior the book. - - PERSONAL It would have told the i'ui1 story of her husband's part in the Burgess-Maciean affair. and of his eventual escape to Russia. At her home she refused to comment last night about the decision. I cannot tell you Dale: why. It is a personal reason." she said. Edition: Mr. Leslie Frewln. the pub- Author: lisher. said: The deal stood to make her s very rich woman. Editor: e knew she would have to eek to her husband about it. Title: e thought everythlnc was _ ing wei.-i." hiiby is working tor e MOSCOW HEW! IQBHCF. ' 1Chara:-tor: or

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---~ _t 1, rt _-ail-,' 92- new /1;.-sin" _ Jr" 'lifeili v ll l i2"LEANorifi_?HiLB_Y, American-born wife 0r_anni;1js thirdi , - . =._.-I11an.,,l;l§@92rold Kim-Plnlby has been granted British citizenship 1l She'.';_i1o92vha lidual nationality and can travel on either her British i, or American passports. Her application for British nationality was made}_ . I - ii l months ago when she nally made up her mind to leave Moscow and J heryhtisband who works there for the Russians. U "' ./.1, F M l_._._...... _...--A 7~--' ---H»-»i- . ; . .54.» She used her new passport for the rst time to y to Dublin and the start oi what she hopes will "be a. i new lite. Ill 1'.-i-:" ; r." 5».-; . J A ,1 The bespectacled housewife who inadvertently - /l found herself caught up in one of the most sensational spy cases or the century had been planning her break Dale: -It ii with the past for nearly a ,-: " i -." "' Ediliorrylfk ; _i ,'' Aulho : ' Year. Her rst move was to by PETER VANE Editor: apply to the British Title: authorities for a. passport. GETS A BRITISH PASS- A Home Office spokesman said yesterday: I cannot . PORT TO START NEW LIP discuss Mrs. Phi1by's jharacter: personal case. I can only say that anyone who married -a Briton after .1949 a. C1u5s1cutlon: " R has the right to apply -tori British nationality. And irl Submiltlnq Oice: London 7 everything is in order that request will be aranted."k 1 , '1..'i£ 3 '" " E3 Being Investigated

. t G '4. 2». .92,he -3- I. I r":,_- ' r fl _ 'Inf? I ''21? Q0-59 E NOT ""_'2 I nrronnnn_"' l L "T ' Ii 1 __. _ W 92191 JAN 11 1906 ~*ii ii%li/iti1"ii*i"@< - 6 I ' ' C C I-0 c there until her rilgl-it to-Dublin about Ioiir rnontl-is no.- . Whg did she decide to leave - her forsure. usbaiid? But the Nobody irnvpresslon knowsin both Whitehall and ashlniion mistis that must she have became been a ted restrictedup with e. Her London solicitor told me Q Pg.- " yesterday. I cannot comment U H1 i un Mrs. Philbys Personal lite. "rTm' No interest 1. She does not want to talk about the past. She now has to think 5-' Everything was in order. A oi the iuture. _ 1"oreiq_i'i Olce spokesman said : " Mrs. Philly is so extremely .-.We ave no particular interest inteilllzent an cultured woman. 1 in Hrs, ?ifii_lby. _5_l'1e is an_in_no-i Bite nu a great interest inithe ,*lcsnt .British citizen and has i arts. it was I who suggested dons nothing wrong." that she settle in Dublin. It is 1. ' Once she had obtained a I grand centre for the theatre. kltep British lorwar passcport in it Mrs. was Philby'sa big literature and painting. . struggle to blot out the strain i and tension oi the past three lnhoriisnse - 1 Ilrl. ,s '"The passport entitles her to . " I am sure she will be able to lead a. very lull and interestini . lettle in Eire without having the liie there. She is. oi course. a 1 bother oi reporting to the police ; woman oi good independent I-I an alien. _ ' ii means." An omcer or the Dublin police laid : Mrs. Philby is a British i Mrs. Philby became nancially i citizen and therefore tree to I independent when an uncle isettle here and come and go l remembered her in his will. - without question. i A close friend of the Philbys 1 "Anyone travelling on an i who had lived in the some American passport has to block oi ats in Beirut told me : register as an alien alter being "I remember one morning in in the country three months. I960 we were havlng- early The-y have to notify the authori- , morning eoee together. ties oi any change of address. They were opening their ; "People travellinir on a mail and Harold Pbllby ii British passport do not have to announced that an uncle had .= register." left. his wife an inheritance or .- t was three years ago that 5106.000 nearly 1135,0001. i. Earoid Philby. one-time Foreign 1;You "He can joked see abouthow clever it saying:was ' " . .=?z':"i'.'j':'Ii*"--. I. -' _ -=1-:>I=;--.1:.--.. to marry a wealthy woman."'. .~; ' _: < .9-. '7 '_ -1'"-._._.=-5,'=;.. E_!_.I_- L_____ l I rainy nappy ' i -1 51' ; ..~:..=i:.;f.=1 i. '>.. $5.4, im ,, = _ . ._ p,. " The friend -added :~ Pm . .~:s..= '- absolutely baffled as to why Mrs. .- I.-TF5 -. .-I " Philby left him. They seemed st .. 7. . , ,_.,.._~,.I|. 4 to be such a hppy pair boiether - ti -j~"'§i3 ' . 1 . in those days." . _ I But whatever ha pened 'i11* Russia. Mrs. Phiiby has-,_so tar gig 1:. l told nobody. .. Mr. George Rich. wealthy Leiccstershlre farmer who M; _ ,1; __ 1. "_ ". . employed her stepson Torn at -. ._ .»==" Philby. met her when she s..I'I-=41 no. .. . --"='-"'2" /'.. ,»A travelled to England just before l. Christmas tn attend her sten- '- - MRS. ELEANOR PIIILBY sons 21st birthday party. . " She seemed fairly haonv at ! -"..i'Iired O! restricted life the party." said Mr, Rich. " But she did not say one word about ifodice diplomat and Britishher husband or Russia. ._,_ _s.nd . Intelligence agent, disappearedG tdldnot ldk-'il."-~~". - - 7i . from his not-ne in Beirut where - -..... _, ...s-.- i_ he. had been woriring as I corro- .. - gilondent tor The Observer newe-. . Xerew r. months later he turned inn in Moscow and the Russians announced that he had been D Q-granted political asylum. AB that time a British - Government spokesman pin- , pointed Phzlby as the mysterious ~ third man" who had tipped ,oii' rclirgnde British diplomats Guy Burgess and Donald glilllitllfl that they were about to e arrested and enabled them to ;escape to Rus-iia in 1951. Burgess died in Moscow in 1963 Mrs. Phiiby Iollowed her hus- band - to Moscovnsnd settled .. ...-._ .__,_ __ i i J

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,/ ___v_1JAILY MIRROR If Man, strilllld , . __ oleA- ' Abandoned ,3 ;/ Bur l'h2lb_92' was never brought bu Jumce ~_§8- 3 /" ".é Ha was I,WIl"dPL the OBE for puhllc IJBE--afterqervlmg in M 15 ll"q.!|:Il1BR and > counter- ehpinnagel luring the 92uu'. _ He vatlialw-d [rmn 1!:*ir1|l. hE~l!an_0n. if! iJa||u5r_1,', I963, Six mn:uh.< later lt was , mrmucerl in Moscow lhat_he had sought ___I;:O1'ldOI'1, England - l;x.1c.al u.uylum ln Ru.~a.~xa. had aban- doned B1-||~=.92u llnllulllly. and become! Buvlat.- citizen. ltwu yearsEn October the sagné By sauna y_ " ;0llNIiLL year. hls Sl-ycag"-old mic. leaner jolnrd hum In Mos- w with Ann. he: 16-year- * Ilnaom - éi"in _ thT'Bu'rEbsa _|§|__m§LP|-IQLBY,Thirdand ld daughter by I nrevlou: marrlnga. Haclean affair--and who. Ilka them. Phllby WA; me Third dfooted to RUl8ia'hI$ been stripped an"' who tinned 0!! onm0as._ -' _ negade dlplomals Guy He was |gi92'Il"l the awn:-:1 in lhn' HHG Uliltl: and lnonald New Year I-Innnur. Murh mu-r. lt wasgilr.- ac elm on lizeir ml: sarur Lml. w men- l Iuund that he us all:-mlv mlrking [01-''I'l1_ey than delecpgd {of Lhe Rus.~amu.~§ nl |l|r- lime. Iuasn. " ' "'g 1 Cancelled ,_._ _...... ______..___ 1-_., I 8/11/65 The annnum-omen! appear:-cl ln last l Julian: night: London Ga2.et1.e under me .u.-m.l-1| / ' lug Honour:-: and AWEl.1'd5." - - , Author: It 5-Bid: lidllor: The Queen has clirerlml llml the 9292]1?oinlmenl of Mr. llnruhl Adi-imn Rus- T~~ HAROLD ADRIAN tic] Pllilhv 10 he ;l n Ullirer of the Ordrf l q I the llrilinlu I-Imuire. dale-d Jamlury l, ---...-._....-.-.-.---»-.,._,_RUSSELLHPHILBY £916. lhlll be 1-am-elled anal lmmlll. Incl l H-.-__.¢ . .. . - his name erased from the Beginner." . l I Phllby was 5t1ip|m:i --| _1n.- OB E on the Ch¢:r~1c'le»r: mcrnnlnenninunn ul l-rune Ml 1: lat e I nr Harold yV:lnm92___ ' 1'. Fiusnllir--all-ulr: giving It-hi; n tn-in-en sn_f.isfm-Lln-y hr" 92"r~nr.'- In t'<~u!-Km pr¢~p:1rr92 wnv; a cusphe hould be strapped I."-ubmnlliuq UIH;-4-1 Usually, |._hIs step ln taken only after Q qourt has convlvlerl a holder of the order I Ill--|u-|I-.92--;92|li;.;|.-.1 ll 1 crimlnal alfeuee. e @6l.QZ§Q3 ' ,3, if NOT nzconozn <_. 128 SEP 1 1965 70sEP7'1Q55 ____,____ el!I-iont g$EJ_§_ Clspet i_...._.._ Spj§9292" Callahan .i_..,._ Conrad Fell __....i______lJ.S.WifeSeen Gale AR Ir ' ll§§R liiorsen 75L.,.._ Fag tibia Sulliva$__ Moscow, Jen. 19 AP!--Mrs. Eleanor Philby, American 1:-Ho . 1'.Brit.ish defector.Hl.m1d_A.._B-. Tove! §%,h.l,Lh1_hu t wan learned returned todly. to Moscow, Ldrs. Philhy, who vanished 1!; tho,.United Staten in July, I'll seen hero by people who circuhto Trotter Tele Room_.._._._ Holmes __i__..._ Gcmdy .._...._..._..___

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-___'_ ___,_-- .'_92. Mrs. Eleanor "f" Loft daughter Behind The Washington Pout and i _ We-.00 in Wesbem Communist circles. An Tlmen Herald American citizen, she reportedly The Washlnqton Daily News i returned via Mexico and Cuba. Friends porte-ti that she is hit- The Eve-nlm; Star ii terly disappointed berause she had New fork Herald Tribune i to return without her daughter -1 _ by I. previous marr'a¢:e. Naw'York Journal-American Her former husband, New York New York Daily News Al: Times UN corrrswondent Ram Pope Brewer, filed a suit in New New York Post a_i__.___ York last July ehargi-'2 there was The New York Times ii imminent danger that his ex-wife would take their riauv"te" "n The Baltimore Sun i___..__. 15,'t0 Russia and that she "would The Worker _ be indoctrinated with Communist principles and anti -American The New Leader am theories." _ » D ...... _...... _ »...... |....l.- -1 ' e|__ The Wall Street Journal _.______i JISWCL wun tun-aq-=i'-.-131 HIE 4.. .. _.92_ ~ The National Qbservar _. _.... _ _ _,______l_...__2______.__.<-...' 4.. _'. 6'1 JQ ZBWD3 People's World Date H Q §~* ,%0<-.1-is .__~/_ 1 I io_,ison .__.__._._.__

F" rI _ ~ y In C ,_.,_ lmont d_iihe World- f H es e .______,,_ as ...... __._.._ I Coilohon_.._____ Conrad

Riots BreakU p _ -1_- ID .. .A M-.. nose I: ll:-I1 AbJ.l"l1OttIlg Owns . folk in Mountmelllck " "!"l<"-._J M/;-'.~tu11mn V abesieged the local court __house yesterday during a - Phearing for 10 members of f Tcivel i. e Irish RepublicanArmy. _ . . - Iajiaccused of trying to spoil which she tried unsuccess- |mPl'lIlC¬5S92 Margaret'srecent ".-- -_._..,.. , fully to gain custody of her Trotter :visit to Ireland. The towns- "' s. -5-$1 ,- ,;-. 11,--_' 92--.-e=:=.'--'-'.- 15-year-old daughter from an -=iolkU1 attacked police cars, "--=-i ,'."_':I-'i'5". -- 7~t T'.'." earlier marriage to New :11:-oke windows and smashed . ~ ~._ furniture. Riot squads had =4.-='e=-t*.-#31 -"E-=!;*.:='~York Times reporter Sam TeleRoom i_.__ 14,. he-nil! H-92rn|'|dl'921-gggug ; tn Q ".=»: 11-+'-.¥"~'-:-;-:.l,--'1-,;-,-.. -.;_ rope - brewer. 92 ...Uabn ...... ,...- I ._ _ Philby, a former British ~ .1 , Holmes __._._..._ newsman and intelligence Goody _i_...___ -ex es» ;. agent, was named by the :1;-gpped policeand remove British government as the 92 -';the prisoners. i= ~I"':is?=.-man 1' who tipped off British E Hundredsoi townsfolk "" "5'-"'13.-*=a ="i*' - 7t Foreign Office defectors Guy Burgess and Donald f ftook partin thedonnybrook. -::' .§'¢I1-;?-===.:".-. '-'-.-A. *1 At least six men were hos- ' 1. :- --=;'-1--. -:-;I MacLean that they were Q,-ritalized. Severalothers =_,~ ;'~_. =1-I , i " - .l";1"M . __ ,- 3 under investigation as secu- 1-were bloodied and one -, rity rlsim. policeman suffered a cut -- _~ -2- -forehead. A girl was knocked ».'¢;.:-.,.. 5|-.-_.:.;__.;-._._ ->~ 9 =. v1 --.r.,,_92 Ayub"'s Son Kiunconscious. ' _ :7ffi7-'1 , . . 1. ,.&mi-". ,. ;_-- It was the second such 77 -. <. KARACI-lICapt. Gauher r eoutbreak in recent days. At Ayub Kahn, son of Pakistan's !:the County Waterford town president, has been accused of murder during wild cele- Iéfs raise /2 "-of Tramore lest week, nine Qother Irishmen charged with ZECH-NENTWICHbrations of his 1'ai.i1ersvic- RDED gincidents duringMargaret's tory in the recent national visit started a 10-minute on trial inGermany elections, and a local magis- gcourtroom brawl. trate will hcar the charges today. Gauher Khan was in- at Last night in another court prison last April. Three men Ia judge sentenced Terence dicted for leading a group of :0"loole, 2'7,to five months and Zech-Nertntwi.ch.s girl his father-s followers in vic- 1-at hard labor after he was friend are also on trial for t o r y demonstrations t h a t Qat-rested earlier in the day aiding the escape. _ allegedly resulted in murder, I-1-; '______ "near the scene of the rioting attempted murder, looting / K 92-Jul"an...... -.-...-:...- PUD§C33lII5 §§ICI¢|| ...... -...--1 QULLILB Q1-inba and arson, but no court of dynamite which he said Peking Warning charges have been drawn up :he planned to use against T O K Y O Communist iorrnally as yet. Some reports -lthe British occupation force China said t.-he United States said 50 persons were killed would be duly punished" if in the riots. _ 5-in NorthernIreland." it continued air strikes against Communist supply .- l-|n War " I ul crirnna ---v-JD lines in Laos. In a state- Dangerous Diversion BONN Fifty legislators ment isued by the Foreign TEL AVIVlsraels Prime I at the ruling Christian Demo- Ministery broadcast in Minister Levi Eshlroi warned The WashingtonPout !and : cratic Party introduced a mo- his Arab neighbors to think Peking and monitored in Times Herald '_,tiona for 20-30 year exten- Tokyo, Chine accused the twice about their plans to » sion of the Nazi war crimes U.S. of direct aggression" divert the headwaters of the The Washinqton Daily News ;siatute of limitations, which in a Jan. 13 raid and threat- Jordan River. In a speech at The Evenlnq Star - is to become effective in Tiberias at the Sea of Gati- ened "stern counter-blows" New HeraldYork Tribune _ ... ll-lay. The autonomous Bava- lee, Eshkol said: unless the raids are stopped. New Journal-AmertcunYork _ I, rian wing of the Party said it We tell o u r neighbors 1- would reject the motion on from this place that we still New DailyYork News Mrs. Philby Seen hope they will think twice :- :. legal and political grounds. MOSCOWMrs Eleanor New PostYork ?;- Convicted Nazi war crimi; before embarking on what Philby, wife of British may turn out for them to be "FL- |__L -n.____ ijnal Hons-WalterZe¢h-N&1nt- _ detector __l;L5_;,.o.l..d._ 'f§§1j!l-H l'lRI'lOP|"llR _----Q.-v-u llllunnfllra -1.11.---92,.a92,,, ill? New turn times ____. _ . -a-wich went on trial tn cm- ' Philby,has'rejoinéd"h §'hF§-_ The Baltimore Sun m______hand in Moscow, according Rumor-Spiking T . _- Kenn, mj§w§=.>mto Russian friends. She van- The Worker _ , Eggi ed last United-Biriire?July on a tripduring to LONDONIn another ef- The New Leader v .~ c~ <92

Q11 replaceSir Alec Doug- las- om as -lealie-as-u..:tne Conservative party. former British Chancellor of the Exchequer Reginald Maud- ling told a dinner meeting that the former prime min- ister is, and will remain at the head of our Party. He ls a lender of outstanding qualities and strength of character." The Half-Strike ROME--Italian customs inspectors began a sched- uled 10-day walkout early today, but one unlon1ep- resenting halt the country: 5000 customs pea'5oI1l1eI--Cle- clded at the last minute to a c c e p t government assur- ances that improvements in salary regulations would be met. Finance police stepped in to replace the striking in- spectors, but officials said the half-strike still would cause disruptions in clear- ing shipments. For the Recoi=_"=' I Britain'sPrime Minister Wilson is expected to an- nounce in Parliament soon that Commonwealth leaders have set a date in mid-year for their summit oon.fer- ence, informed sources said. ' 'Ihecentral committee of the World Cmincil oi Churches, meeting in En- ugu, Nigeria, approved a plan to set up a working group with the Roman Cath- olic Church to study further ecumenical collaboration. The Kennedy Round of tari -cutting negotiations resumed in Geneva after a nth's recess. CompiledL14; from Washlna Q - on . onE, and news Meme;neporll 1|-omabroad.

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.r I Le - . _ _ 1 -1. 7-. IIl¬IiCaI1 Wife Of 5- __ 1,} K1 11b has turned up E oscow agam a er l." . - :~.- J r ,.-. .1. ~__ ..-t-;.~r;:g.-;.-1.....,92_. __ __ .;;,_.;r<-.--. 3.!. vanishin in the United " ' She has rejoined her husband, " '7' 52' ' the former Foreign Office diplomat, -N-QT B11-"03-DEB

n J __- who was the third man in the 1|'lB FEB 3 3955 Q _._; Burgess and Maclean affa1r. _ -in-n --III 3'1 .7 _- '§;i;_é_;57,7_ 7.j,j.;;j;;i;;-55;;,3; Before she vanished U.S. immigra- j;;'*Yf tion ofcials had withdrawn her pass- » - port. There were reports later that she f ; - had been " smuggled " out of the country. i Date: 1/ 19/ 65 92 " A Legal bdlll E°' . . t .= 1,; 1%-1}-7§7._=-.,>,@sj;;";;j'A f" _f§ ":57;_ _ _ 1 Author: Keith MOI f 8131; <~~ oi

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When Mr. Brewer said two months laY!l"1."na'E"Annhad been handed over to him, there was no mention of Mrs. Phi|bys whereabouts. Tonight Mrs. Philby was seen by American friends who knew her in Beirut before Phiiby disappeared there. He turned up Ln Russia iii months later. Upset Friends say she is "extremely unset " at having to return to Moscow without her daughter. Americans who have seen her say Mrs. Philby is " des- perately anxious " to move around among Westerners in Moscow in a normal way. but her husband is opposed to this " as a result of the strong inuence of Donald Maciean." Philby and Maclean are now meeting almost daily at Macleans apartment near the centre of the citv. Q ln 1951 Philby tipped off Guy Burgess, who in turn told Maclean that British security services wereinquiring about them. Burgess and Maclean then ed t0-R-ussiur" --i--¬_.i_, ___

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_ °Bpseni I 'uztiiiivctnovel ...... _....__..i L_....._ Trotter ._.._...._.____ Tele Room ___.._ I92.l I!! I Illll |ist Sam Pope Brewer, {ed st Holmes ._...... _....,.i suit in New York last July Gondy __.....__i charging there was imminent H II -Pnmiys Wiley danger that his ex-wife would take their daughter, than 15, to Russia and that she would be in . in 1963. I-In was named in ma Back in Russiaindoctrinated with Communist principles and anti-American British Parliament r { .1 MOSOOW AP!-Mrs. Eleanor theories." " 1man who tipped oft British P-hiiby, American wile of British Brewer, a correspondent atForeign Office detectors Guy the United Nations for the New Burgess and Donald MacLean deem» _enes.;§- R... use; York Times,won custodyof the that the British security organ- _lf_l;i1hy,returned has Moscow,to. child. _ ' pization was on their trail. 92 it was learned today. Phiiby, a former British hater it was announcedthat Phtlby was in the Soviet Union. the Mrs.UnitedPhilby, Stateswho vanished in July, wasinhtelligence an, disappearedagent and from Beirutinews- He made no public appearance seen here by people who circu . but was met in a hotel lobby on late in Western Communist Jan. 2 by a newsman. Philbyi circles. An American citizen, said he had en apartment mi she reportedly returned via Moscow and was learning Mexico and Cuba. Russia n. H tedle repor works Friends reported she is for a Moscow publis1i'er".'_"" I bitterly disappointed because she had to return without her daughterby I previousmar-i risge. A i He,1i'mr husbmrl,'lom~.._1al- _ _a_A_ __ | i<§7i'7/ 6; . ,_". .¢-" ' -I./:5"Th;H '- Washington I" and Poet__..._._.__. "'"""" Times Herald A, ;92_-1,a.- Th a W shiU IN] to DailyI1 _- News ' J" --'3 -I 1 The Evenlnq Stur_....J_...__._i__ New York Herald Tribune __,...._...._ New York J ournul-American i New York Dally News i_._...... New York Post _...... _._....._._i _ I The New York Times .____i The Baltimore Sun mi 5 The Worker . The New Leader ...... __.._....__i ll _ I The Wuli Street JOMHIGI _._--i w"i "9292J The National Observer i___e__ People's World **~ Date

V JAN -i 9"1955 ifi. Wt. O 592 7 ______, __ _ - . - -L - I. -- - . _ _ s . . ,@ .¢ ; -..-92 '- - "-_|_ , -ur *-;~.='*-*~- " --~~"-'=*~*-li.;-'*'1-**;s.T*Tl7'~=13e'?'..*t-F-st*.Z££°IZ+?£f.:<%r"~s...1>....;~?2_er...~rt'§<¢.;ee-"I. -3,..t is -- _ 1 ---i_~-.. - ~.- e -.,, . .-,_.-.-,.». t . _..e..-.~w*.*1i*.><-5.-A-*?~.*.. 'e.~.v' 4'-'r:=~~- -et_.==-.. -- :e.~::_@r_».-» 32- C Belmont O - P. 9,.I . jeh Cos er Callahan ._._._____r__ Conrad .__._=,-;__ Felt _,.._..______Gale ,7 i / ../' R05 eI1 ,1. Sullivu { Tavel Trotter ____.._ Tele Room v _ Holmes F"hiiby,W0hoin Defeeredf".L ,,/1 92Gandy._.i._____ .¢¢Says Sov|e'l'ls Dandy Moat-o9292,Jan AP!Harold 2 R AKim éghilby vietBritish Union newsman in 196.3,and surfaced ex-diplomatwho tieecte o the S53_ /X/L I/N 8 hotel iohby cr092v1l_ " briey today in a Moscow In a few minutes of conversa- tion, Philby, who has been de- the Soviet Union marvelous, lb- ,3:.. S? ._ Ir-0 sc ribedas an accom| ilice of Don isolutely wonderful." aid Maclean and the late Guy Burgess, British Foreign Office. Philby ,was recognized by a defectors in-1951, said he found! Western newsman. It was be~ I tr 1-: *"j_f * - '.lieved to be his rst contact with .1 :1 __ -_.-. I a Westerner since he arrived here -»~-r I-w'_,.__92_ -- 4 1,, .92.':'-_ more than a year ago. : ., .; _»_,, Hia Children in England l . . .»= . -..¢- ~ . :-=3----Q» .7.1 ;¬:f.:_. i 51'_*' '.,.1=§;£i;=g_§ .--_;.m_;- . -'.'T'-1"- -. -- Philby indicated he was doing i .1: _§;;i=a: F .1~5

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Gale ..__,.,._,.,i._,___i """" W " ,1H '1; IA, r GandYRose" __T77F'_l -I ti HolmesSullivan 4% iii a" » Tavel .._.__...__..i I l Trotter 1British D§e%tor-Pops Har-ling ras a writer for a Moscow A i old A.12. Kim_ffhi_lb§L_a Brit-ublisher. ish newsman and former diplo- mat who detected to the Theformer Britishintelli- Soviet Union in 1963, surfaced gence agent disappeared from briefly today in a Moscow his home in Beirut, Lebanon, in January, 1963. He was said i hotel lobby crowd. to have been under surveil- In a few moments of con- 1-ance by British Intelligence versation, Philby, who has on suspicion that he was the Ibeen described as an accom- "third man" who Warned Mac- Lean and Burgess in 1951 that 1plice of British Foreign Office they were in danger oi arrest defectors Donald Macl.-ean and on espionage chargoai-.- Guy Burgess, said he found the Soviet Union marvelous, absolutely wonderful." Philby was spotted by a Western newsman who recog- 1nized him in his English tweed jacket and gray flannel trousers in the lobby of Mos- cow's UkrainaHotel. Philby indicated he was do- 1 '11ii - "soso" in learnin RusE * sian and said, I have a nice {lat here." The Soviet government has The Washington Pout and publicly announced that Phi1~ -i1". Times Herald by asked permission to stay NOT Rl7ICi'i',-iii?-Q The Washinqton Daily News A_ lg: .!.»',,~qg: was The Evening Stu: in Russia and _become a Soviet i citizen,He hasbeen reporigri§gn1;h~ ' 'l ""'-' New York Herald Tribune o-sq . New York Journal-American ______New York Daily News 4o'_ New York Post The New York Times _ .. __ The Baltimore Sun 4 Lo-l§~lo ds4,, The Worker UAN7-1965| st» . The New Leader The Wall Street-Journal M *-~MY 0-II .11.¢?J92..,,_-__'£f|.,":c .. av '-. - miik-km . ._¬_"_"1 The National Observer elf; Marx 4&3 PeOplE'B World Date __ 3gr%l_|._;._ §u an " ~ Tfvei Trotter ..._._.___ Tale Room __.__ Holmes 1% Ai'!T"11dtl1@.Y9eLh~l}l1Gundy _...._.___?

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Philhy TurnsMOSCOWFormer Upfirit- ish journalist an }Foroign Office aide H are hiihyld P '45' working for e boviet No- vosti news agency. reiiabie sources reported. He dis- 'r appeared from his corre- sp0nden1s post in Beirut in June, 1963. Philhy was identified as the "third man" in the Bur- gess-M a cl e a n espionage case. He reportediy tipped off the two Foreign Office employes -- both of whom defected to the Soviet Union in 1951 -' that the British inlelliencc had them under su:-L-;92i.U.am-0. --.-.- The Wclshlnqton POI! nd -L- Tjmgg Herald Th; Wuahlnqlon Ddily N9"-I --- The Eveninq Star ...._._i?- New York Herald T!1b921I'IG --- New Y9;-L; Journal-Americdn ._..._._._ New York Mirror ._._-_------i- /'92 .__ 92 New York Duilf New --""'-""- lyr f-I New TheNew York York Pout Time; _-.-_-_------i_..._._-___-

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W-i-1-_-e.£,.~J=1:,-ii92§.;:"r~**=fM»~I- Belmont 0 Mohr __ id /.. ' Casper Cuilohun ___ /EM.? Conrad DeLoucl1i____ Evans _,,__,___,______Gale _i_____ Boson Sullivan _.__, ,4 Tuvel Trotter i Tele Room _ REPOR¥ERGRANTED Holmes ¢'USTODYOF CHILD Gundy ______J » State SupremeCourt Justice , Morris E, Spector yesterday grant the application of_§a_m Po §re_*g92;e_i_',a. New York Times correspondent at the United Nations,for the sole custody of his 15-yee.r-old; daughter, Ann Callard Brewer. i The application was granted from the bench after a brief, uncontested hearing. The court was informed that the whereabouts of the child were not known but that it ]_9214.~ =_'_&.,.r was assumedthat she was with her mother. Mrs. Eleanor Phil- I by. Mrs. Phiihy was married F1. Jr to Harold A. R.Phiiby, a._ZBrit- ish néW§pHpe'1'_ni'51ij"sbonalter obtaining a Mexican divorce from Mr. Brewer several years; =-'-so - " i 92 Miss 1'.-esWVa.ngel,a. neighbor of 1virsT'T'hU5?at 310, ,_Westi I l11th _Street,testified a't'the r hearing?that Mrs. Philby and I the child had left on July 16 land had not returned. l Mr, Phiiby, who disappeared last year from the Middle East, where he represented two Brit- ish publications. turned up later in the Soviet Union and was The Willhlnqton Post qnd granted soviet citizenship. E. In his suit for custody,Mr. Times Herald Brewer declared that there was The Washington Dolly New; "___ a. danger that his former wife Imight takethe girl to Moscow, The Evening Siqr where she might he "indoctrin- ' New York Herald T1-ibm-,9 ated with Communist principles1 . . York Journqi-Amorlccn __ and anti-Ameri s. 1 -1_, { ' I TheNEW /' - _ , n New _ _d¬;/ The York Mirror _,_,_ 1 New York Dally New; New York Post i--------iy The NQW YorkTimes '1¢§ .< /K "2 ._ The Worker ./' M;F The New Leader i Wall Street Joutnql QX QOJ5 st!/Rec;National Observe; 966' gill 5 no--'.Peopie's--zéjonnrzn World Date nl92 110 1.91$k_uii_AUii ism: g U ,¢_- .__,..-/92!Y_,' 1' "92 O 6.

iMRS.PHiLBYA - 1 mrso M suvc 1/, _- I/J1:--' I . . - l}l- fxll» '/I I. 1 A lawyer for rn Pope lrewer, NwYcrk Time:eer- iplhem; atthe UnitedNa-! /" ' I ll ;1l0ns, said Tuesday that Mr. I / Brewer: 15-year-old daughter, , / . /', -Ann, and his former wife, Elea- _nor had been missing since _ I fir-iay. - *- 4! I J1"= 3 marriedMr. Brewer;to H. A.~?.f_Trf_'_l_i_lli_:y,to wife is 1-! ll a former Bri'ti'§h'dlBmatand i -

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'92 --e-"'H, ,_, ." o--. |-- -».-4_ 2 - .. 92.._ ' r92,'., 92 '"- _<::92 __,/ 92.,_..-_.t.iK.-_-"- 92;'/92_._i=_i i..92'.92.92;L/'...92*_':>"92.>_i.,- i L I ;_ ._.__nl t.:L_;; 1.11:! ' .ir.'c:<"ray STEELE -- - ,______-___ . Strings-Howard StartWriter The late Gen. Douglas MaeArthur's chargesthat the British betrayedlterean Warstrategy andbattle plansto the Chinese Reds have since been buttressed by the exposure -..-:.= of tl.:'eetop British diplomats who had access tothese war secrets as Soviet spies. 1 The three DonaldItlaclean, GuyBurgess andlia_roltL_l:ltil_;_ /5'0/" t byall subsequently detectedand fledbehind H1;-atCur- 1- ~_' _ ,_ | - ' l" lain. rt» i, '1 LUCAS INTERVIEWED - /.. ,r | .~ Gert. Mae.-92rthur'sbitter charges were made in a 1934 in- é -__{:5 Z-_;0_/.1 terview with Scripps-Itoward reporterJim G. Lucas and t "' £1 were publishedyesterday by Scripps-iloward newspapers. i ,{_{'},-,t-._/3,/9*'__3 92_'. WashingtonGen. during iiiaciirthurioidthe Korean Lneas it-ir.War wasmessageturned every oversentby the tel é-"' _.*-.-.----"2. he L.-__...... ;=.-.» ~.- State Departmentto theBritish whoin turn leaked to the it NOT *""'°"l'7*""""$b1"q'°" '=1'"' PM --- Chinese communists "within 43 hours." 1 A British Embassy spokesmaifsassertion yesterdaythat i there was no i'oun:tlion"to the M:.cArthur chargesechoed 1 similar claims made by the British Foreign Office and other Times Herald '3 officials even as the Burgess, Maclean and Philby spy cases The WcnahtnqtonDally News were unfolding. i-',','_-iél'hA_£I.1|4nl-nqi Star 1955 ARTICLE New Yuri: Herald Tribune i Gen. Mi1C!92l°iill-ifhimseii, ina 1956article inLife magazine New Ycrk Journal-American .i._ r about his dismissal hyPresident Trumanas UN C0ntni.'mtic1' New York Mirror iii in Korea, briefly cited the Burgess-Macleancase tPhiiiiy had New York Daily News __..._..__. - o not yet been exposedas a member oithe team.! Noting that the defection and exposureof Burgess and New York Pelt .,,i___ hi:-clean had started to unfold the "true facts" about leaks The New York Times __ ._.___ of Korean War secrets to the communists, he wrote: - The Worker __i...._._.._ "These men with access to secret files were undoubtedly The New Louder i.._....._.....__ linl-cs in the chain to our enemy in Korea thru Peking by way oi .92tnseow." ' ' '' TheWall Street Journal ._...... _._ Gen. . -.;;hur added that President Truman and other The National Observer __....i..... U. S. ou._ ;'-resumebiyhad rein. . it! invc.-.:L__=his e People: World 1_,_._...... _._..._._ i warnings §alill.ltileaks sincetiny samesilt-1* the Data " I i.- ."=:l__ l Alger lli.-.-;anti y Dexter White scandals"and therefore ? "caused we c. .-pestresentment." ' "92 .- 2APR24' As _ z": a cu as . Ol.~ ': :1 -Jence, Philby once referred to himself 0 s inthe iritishl-liss -PR 9 -; - rm. '71".'1 J '7~--t ' 6 »"- __,F@. re-"'':'- '7. .. - so "'s;;.-L:3 ' ""-,-, .-. i. T" _.I--_-came i'rie:.:l,-;' dedi- rf My I 1", or ;,i§*t,'-'11."-1*?"-if:-5._f4*~;1'*¢v'* -.t -'1. -.»a_:--..t--'t'-:-:@-=- - -.~t=~$i,»*:...-;».#--_. £5*"'- - 'I'"*-;.@Ef?»"7£*92_'a*7|»s-92§'§=i§!&.:t>'1titsik*-- :1». ' 3;.-=-,_e's_..*"'*-:r?:;1».s~Ir._37:§:[email protected]Z"37?=-as.--51:~.'»"' . . Q .,/' - 92 0-

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i s . - - .--1" ij;:= , if... . 1 1 i 4 ._~.;_.,.- . H..:.1}/ .- -J 1 _ i 'c:.:':! communists when they were fellow students at Cam- . .- -- -:~'. - -.... -britigc University. Burgess and it-taelean were homosexuals 1. _.____.= HAROLD PHILBY ._ " ,- 1"'_ "~'.: "."92- l and heavy drinkers. Phiiby was a Burgess protege. Ail ,.-.,._ ..s.- ~q 1 no. three came from distinguished families. ' _,. , .r .. KEY POSTS .. .-92ltho it was later disclosed that all three often voiced strong anti-American and pro-communist views, they rose r fast in the British foreign service anti occupied key posts in t4 , U.S.-British relations during the Kori.-an War. . j _ I Donald Duart Maclcan, who served in the British Embassy . t92 3 here from 19-14 until 1948, tzcndcd the American section of .2» - 92 _,..p-' l. t . . A >~ .t Q - ',,t A. . . v t"l i. __ rt-.-> u s the British foreign office from October, 1950, until he secretly gt. _ *... _ __ ii» ~ 5.1 M» . I fled to Moscow on May 25, 1951. _ ' > - 'I '5 - f . 3 . '1Guy Francis dc Money Burgess was Second Secretary of _,~_ __ _ .. . -[P .,_ _ i _! - - 2" ..». '- i the British Embassy from August, 1950, until May, 1951, t when he hurriedly rcturncd to England and defected with 1 ~i,@ 11- »'.." | i_ ltfaciean. He died in Moscow on Aug. 30, 1963. 1 i we.- . I I: _p-. Harold A. R. Philhy was First Secretary of the British l Eiiibassy and a tee Eritish intelligence otticer in Washing- ton from October, 19-:9, until June 1. 1951, when he was '5 recalled to London and dismissed. He later went to the V . J______,,.._,.q ,,; c._..._....i-- i-'- Middle East as a journalist and fled to Moscow in Jan- DONALD MACLEAN GUY BURGESS 1 uary, 1963. *...=Li permitted to go to the Middle East in hopes he would lead AT LONG LAST them to other Soviet spies. Only atter Philby detected last year, did the British Gov- ernment finally admit he was he "third man" who had u. s._ 'r::n:..-t'r i i warned Burgess and iiiaclean that British and U. S. intelli- The Saturday article, however, charged gence agencies were about lo expose their spy activities. that the Foreign Office had fired Philby in 1951 only because 1 The Saturday Evening Post, in a recent article on ti:-i iihe FBI and Central Intelligence Agency had threatened ..ase. reported that Phiihy received an FBI report that otherwise to break off all Intelligence liaison between the Moclcan and Burgess were being investigated as communist two governments. i agents and called in his friend Burgess to tip him off. A British white paper" on the Burgess-Maclean case Burgess, according to this report, immediately fled to i made public in 1955 sought to minimize both the significance Eiigland, 9292'here he warned hint-lean. They then arranged of their defection and their access to military and diplo- with Soviet Intelligence to spirit them out of England and matic secrets during the"Korean War. i behind the Iron Curtain. A labor member of Parliament charged in 1955 that Philby Scripps-Howard reporter R. H. Shzickford wrote at t.-.e 1was the third man" in the case, but Harold I-Iacmilian, time, however. that the admission they were Soviet so. s then Foreign Secretary, vigorously denied it, insisting the "revived the strong presumption that both men not only l British Government had no evidence he had warned Burgess betrayed their own country but also the United States. and ltacieai-i, = * At various critical times at the end oi the war and I I Later,_1_?-ritish officials said Philhy had been "cleared" and afterwards, both men had access to top British-American a secrets, including atomic information and Korean War mil.- 92 tary decisions," lttr. S11-'1h*'f reported. _ !l'd is Belmont _L|!:£_. / {O Mohr Casper .___._ / w -gggscaCallahan

' vans . 'Gale 1 SulE}dh Flo en . __ To 1___._._ Trotter Tale Room _..._ Holmes TSpy Figure's W|fe Gandy __..__ Goes to Moscow -r= normon. Ootl so um .-Mrs. I-Ia.rold~Phi1py, American wife tof'the'third man in the Bur- Mgess and Maciean spy case, has I ioined her husband in iviascaw. we The British Foreign otce announced yesterday that Mrs. >*M Philby, 49, formerly oi Seattle. _ M Wash._ arrived in Moscow Sep- 92 . tember 26. Phiiby. a former Foreign O!- W fice employe and Middle East correspondent tor a British newspaper. was identied in Parliament last July as the man who -tipped British diplo- lmats Guy Burgess and Donald Maclean 12 years ago that gov- /A J"~- / ernment authorities suspected them oi being spies. . I-~--~ -' 1 o ailment. N01" nacom» 4 Philby disappeared from Bei- in ue92.1 d 1% rut last January. Parliament was told in July that he II-I sq:--"-=1 in the Soviet capital, and a Foreign Office spokesmen said his Eiie was free to Join him. ..- - ._ . » The wuahsnqion Poll and _.._ Time! Herald The Wulhlnqlon Dali? New-_l ._ Tho Evqnin 5"" I I. New York Herald Tribune __._ Z _ 9., New York Journal-Amati-<:an _ New York Mirror ./ - Nqw York Daily NOW! .-.---- Now York Poet The New York Timon i_._._ The Worker The New Loader _.._._.._.__-i The Wail street Journal _....- The National Observer ._..-_-- I / 1 92__ __ J People: world _.__,___i?--------l V? | NW? S we -I k H Dula $00 3 L1-§§|Q

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3"esrv1 "lJ§iF¢1'or's Wih Reported in Russia MOSCOW,% {U?Il1 st. Suiyu11L___.._ 'I'he Americawbornwire of mam H.tn A. R. Kini1' Britain'sPhilb , third urgess _/*7 Maclean spy case, is believed Tuvel to have joined her detector husband in Russia. Informed sources here said Mrs. Eleanor Phllby was is- sued a Soviet visa last month Trotter .8nd was believed to have tlown to Russia Sept. 26. -{Carrel&;£§§?° ¬1**g!;g;Z{;5%T' The British government has nam ed Philby, who had Tele____ Room» worked as a Correspondent in Lebanon tor n British news- paper, as the mysterious Holmes in third man" who tipped oft lturncoat diplomatsGuy Bur- Gundy gess and Donsid iviaciean that

trail. British agents were on their

' Bothtied behind the Iron appeared .Curtair1 in 1951. Phiiby dis- from Beirut early L:»92 -...,__.,...._1 LL-.. J._..,__.I .._ HU5 ycll HJILIlllell LLILIIEU up inside Russia, where he be- came s Soviet citizen. MacleanBurgess died last summer. workinghas been reported Q . for a publishing --III"-'- housein svsuauuw.1.1..... Y7 :01Illaw11t:,| ...:s.. I Melind a also American ' bornI 9292i -joined l1'imabouta year after I . he and Burgess escaped. 92__J " '._W -i------* ---------

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The Wcllhinqton Poli and _..__.__ Tlrnel Herald ,| The Wctlhlnqlon Dully News .__:..._,,.._ The Eivoninq Star .._._._.....i New York Herald Tribune i New York Journal-American i New York Mirror w Nlw York Dally News ._.i_._ New York Post i____.._.i The New York Time: __...... _ The Work or oi..-i Thy Now Lauder do X -_-- 'Wall Thu Strcat lournl __._...i _i_¬r§4' '£ __i= - I - . =2 ...... WI._:_-, .1 ft P .-_-U."-no ------i Mohr --:1 Casper inti OF PHILBY Callahan . FLIEST0 MOSCOW Conrad DeLooch §92i1|BfiCh JoinsDefactor' E vans Linked to Spy Affair Gale K specuiio'rmmu YorkTime! Rosen LOXDDN, Oct. 29:-Mrs. Eleanor Philhgvthe American Sullivan fwite oi_I:!. a_._. ghiisy, the for- Tove! .,.rner British dip'lomat'a.ndjour- irlnlist Who fled to the Soviet -Union,joined has herhU5b+d} Trotter in}-toscow. TaleFioom thatThe she flew Foreign fromOffice Londontodky 0 said 1.92-Ioscow Sept.26 in a.,-Soviet Holmes nit-liner on :92. 1-egiilnr flight. Goody "The assumption is =1.hnt she" wentto join her husband,"the Foreign Oiiice adijf-d. . Mrs. Philby arriiged in Britain from the United} States eight days before her ight to Mos- cow. She had spent some time in Britain aft 11- her husband vanished last§Jam:aryfrom 'their homoin _Eeirut. Lebanon. 92 i lAfter Phi1b_92l"s disappearance, the Government disclosed that he had bOrn the "third man" '/I who in 1931] informedDonald !Maelean andthe lateGuy Bur- @1055, spies for the Russians. iiiit the British securityservice ._ ,_, I- as closing in on them. Two 1-led Britain dgri "IV/yyoL . The two Foreign Office dipi - l ats fled from Britain. Macle. still lives in Moscow with his}, -American-born wiie. i .' tr -, The Moscow correspondent ofl J ' 4 1 I | The Daily Mail reported today J! ithnt a rnemlner of the British P Embassy staff in Moscow had recognized Philhy near a. sub- - |I" '6If L ~/Tim .--4 , _ . _.--.92- '-urbanviiia used as a. weekend __..___. --S _ _. D 'theirhouse by families.British diplomatsand: HG-T ;;gr_.*>iiDr. l today But it the had Foreign no informationOffice said 141 OCT81 1953 about him. New Wqlhinqton Poll and ...-..-..__...J _ _ - whereaboutsThe only officialafter henews left Beirut. oi his Time: Herald _._...-_- forwhere The he London was a Observer correspondent and Washington Dally Now: the weekly Economist, was an Evanlnq Star ' announcement by Moscow that he hadbeen grantedpolitical York Herald Tribune ._.___._. iasylum inthe SovietUnion. b The York Journal-American .____ | Mrs. Philby was traveling on York Mirror .__....__._,.__.._._ is UnitmStates passnort. .i = "5-?*"__ . ._q,~s._:11. /r -' ,j§l=., :2:York Daily New! ____.._.i DB! York Poll_.__.._.iE__;_ New forit " 1; . sow Worker _? - /2,925 Q. 1 5 soc»:iii*3Bi?'i°%°°i New LaudarL25 ______...__._._ %°

; ...... _. . . > '7 ~** ' 7* W? ~'7 Y W T - - " - .-..- --3.~ . -- .- ~ 1, To-..-»'~.-"-.--1.-4" "92§"r=~",¢92P-'r__ "T"-7-"~* "-:-92" . ' <--<:=;.- . '. f'"§",j-x;,..¬"'- .- 'o- . . 1.. 7"-P 7- A s I -'M" "'*",-"='""~":"s-iv?-¥"" ="S?5-41"; - - " . . M , . __ -_ Wall Street Journal_ . ....i....i Notional Observer ....._.....i DELIIIOD6,.L_.__._ I Mohr F Casper Callahan _...____,_ /I ,. g:::cConrpd Gale Boson § Sull ._._.__ Tov 1 __._.._.__ Trotter ' Tole Room Holmes Gcmdy ..__..._._._

'_.._._-_ 3 l.S0viets Shelter " . I ' I -Third ManSpy .@Pmid* 1 By RichardHughes The LondonSunder Tirafrjf -4- LONDON-H. R. Kim!;13ni1-92 Q3. b_v__ now identified"".is "the Tihird man" who warned Guy Burgess and Donald MacLean of their impending arrest for espionage and treason 12 years ago, is "recuperating" in la Soviet sanatoriurn in the_ av 92Black Seaanea. pi His disappearancefrom the i 1 Middle East at the beginning of the year, it is now evident, A-P 4 surprised and embarrassed the -I Soviet authorities, who still do .;*___ ,1] .'_,- not believe that there was any ire:-11 needfor his ight. Thei I-{_";'§, =:.*{i.92t-.-a. ' words unjustifiable panic" were privately used to me lastpi 191 SEP 301% week by a highly placed Rus- sian contact during my visit to Moscow. '. Senior Soviet officials made The V-'oshlnq92on'Polk _-...i..and ii it clear that Philby is regard-I Times Herald 3 ed by the Soviets as a figurei The Wushlnqlon Daily News _.._. i ofnofi""i92 great irnportan;;e_____i The Evening Star ____.__.____._.__._._. New York Herald Tribune _.._.. New York Joormxl-Amortcmn ____ New York Mirror .__..__.....__._.._- New fork Daily News _____i_ New York Pool The New York Tlmel _...._..._....?- The Worker . - , b The New Louder The Wnll Slreel Journal i.__-_- -...?...... -_-.-i- The Notional Observer _?_i_. __ ;_*_.._ ; '92 Dqte _ . "/'3"?' ,5! U .&" { 2 .- AI. _ " 5*? ocn 1963 SEP£b1963 ao&5 x_ A t Q! 3/ U AL

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---Q-_.¢_ ... 4 < <1 Col Iohun '" »BT;;m-Witt?" V¢8?§i§.§.h7:£_ ' E ans Gale 850$Philby, to M Rosen - Pre_ Reports-:: _; st-IHIVG Tovel LONDON, Sept. 9 UPI! ' Trotter * The London Daily Express re-h ports today that the late Brit-4 Tele Room lsh turncoat diplomat Guy Burgess lefta wlll bequeatlr I Holmes ______Gcmdy ______Qrnilby,ing about his $6000"most to Harold faithful ' i92EIE'n'd."'- . _ i * Burgess died Aug. 31 inn Moscow or heart disease. Philby was granted political 3» asylum by the Russians int February. < The British government has said Philby was the "third man" who tipped off Burgess _and Donald MacLean that {British intelligence agents 92 were closing in on them. The ' .two diplomatsfled to Russia , -/N Qln 1951. ' Philby, who was Middle East correspondent for the Observ- er and the Economist, van- ished from his home in Belrutl last year. The government! - laterSoviet stated agent.he~ , had been at ' ;

192""' * 'fl?.DED 191 SLP 11 1963

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