Robert Magidoff: Correspondent, 'Spy,' Author and Educator By THOMAS KABAKER ROBERT MAGIDOFF, now a I learned that my secretary had teaching fellow in the Slavic accused me of spying for the languages department, once shot United States Defense Depart- to international prominence by ment. The news actually came as being the first man to be thrown a relief after a week of suspense. out of Russia on the grounds that My wife and I had been followed he was a spy. for seven days - it was spring he was awak d uand you can always spot the po- "I was awakened quite early In lice agents in the spring. They're the morning by the head of the outside so much. They're the first Moscow Bureau of the Associated ones to get a suntan. We used to Press - my old boss before I went call them the Sunburned Com- to work with the National Broad- rades. casting Company," Magidoff said. "Anyway, I called our ambas- He turned in his chair to face sador, Walter Smith, and broke the window of his office although the news to him. I asked for an his eyes never seemed to focus embassy car - not only to gain on what was outside. time: I feared that I would be ar- "It was then, for the first time, rested the moment I stepped out of the house, and then I never would get a chance to see the . . . just published ambassador at all." Leslie White's HE TURNED back from the win- dow and frowned. "Mr. Smith EVOLUTION wanted to give us asylum at the OF CULTURE epused and seemed to be McGraw-Hill Book Co making his decision all over M lagain. "I had to refuse. Despite the risk, I couldn't run; that therefore made no attempt to an- swer those queries. "THE THIRD question con- cerned Soviet air transport. On the day I got the question- naire the Soviet papers were full of information in preparation for Russia's "Aviation Day." ThereI was nothing in the answer to Mc- Graw-Hill's question that didn't appear in the papers. "The truth is that I didn't even write that story. My assistant did it for me and the article appeared in three magazines in the United States with his by-line. "Well, I went to the office and wrote an answer to the charges which the letter had brought against me. The letter, of course, was never published, and Nila and I were ordered to leave Russia within two or three days," AND SO Robert and Nila Magi- doff left the Soviet Union to return to the United States and for a brief while became celeb- rities of international importance. But people forget, and the world forgot the first American to be ejected from Russia as the world entered the cold war. "Covering the Soviet-German war. That was the most interest- ing," he said. "A most accurate history of the war can be told from the graves. I saw it at Sta- lingrad. Neat graves with crosses when the Germans were advanc- (Concluded on Page 12) t r c Y k t r C e c e t z 5 i t C G i E ', £ 2 "", C c would give the Russians the chance they were looking for. In a way it would be a cwnfession of my guilt. My guilt and the guilt of the American Embassy. We would wait and see what would happen. "My wife, Nila, and I left the Embassy on foot. We were not being followed. The Russians had their case and needed to know no more about us." ROBERT MAGIDOFF leaned back in his chair and half- smiled. "It was strange about Cecelia, my secretary. She was born in Michigan. It seems her family mi- grated to Russia during the de- pression. I don't think she wrote that letter. It had a certain in- evitable, hackneyed style which only comes out of the Soviet For- eign Office. I suppose it wasn't her fault; she was a Sovietsciti- zn and when the authorities tell you to find something, you find it."$ What Cecilia found was a ques- tionnaire which McGraw-Hill sent to all its bureaus. (Magidoff was the head of their Moscow Bureau.) "I had no information, on the first two questions, concerning underground installations and atomic research, nor did I have any legitimate means of obtain- ing the information desired, since every aspect of such matters, in- cluding their application to peace- time industrial production, is con- sidered top secret in Russia. I MAGAZINE Vol. V, No. 4 Saturday, January 17, 1959 A Talk With Robert Magidoff ,By Thomas Kabaker Page Two Michigan's Search for More Doctors By Lane Vanderslice Page Three Dilemma of College Athletics By Alan Jones _Page Five Tunisia Today By Ahmed Belkhodia Page Eight A Liberal Education By Harold Taylor Page Nine Individualism in College By Robert Krohn Page Thirteen Herb Gardner-A Review By Burton Beerman Page Fourteen MAGAZINE EDITOR-David Tarr COVER:-An eight-year-old Tunisian boy, bottom, is already profes- sional in engraving silver plates and other metal work. See the story sn Tunisia on psge eight. Walk etween library and Mason Hall is shown in top photograph. 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