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Word: macleans (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Alving, although she improves in the scenes with her son, Oswald, played by James Laferla. Laferla's low-keyed mumbling may be appropriate to the depressed Oswald, but it soon becomes, boring. He has some good moments, however, which is more than one can say for Peter MacLean as Reverend Manders...

Author: By Daniel J. Chasan, | Title: Ibsen | 11/23/1963 | See Source »

...Maclean's voice has intensity, but his bland, uniform and almost constant intensity fails to convince or even, after a while, to entertain. All three of these actors often speak too rapidly. They lose good lines and make many passages difficult to understand...

Author: By Daniel J. Chasan, | Title: Ibsen | 11/23/1963 | See Source »

Britain had Burgess and MacLean, the U.S. its Rosenbergs. But for the most part Frenchmen do not spy, or at least they seldom get caught. Last week France joined the mainstream with its biggest spy case since Mata Hari. In custody for passing secrets to the Russians was a chubby, urbane press attache named Georges Paques, 49, who had served both the French High General Staff and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The case was critical because Paques held a "cosmic" security clearance-highest classification for both France and NATO. The man with the cosmic view had access to intelli...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: The Man with the Cosmic View | 10/4/1963 | See Source »

Died. Guy Francis de Money Burgess, 52, Eton-produced British diplomat who, with his colleague Donald Maclean, was found to be a top Soviet spy after their sensational 1951 flight to Russia; of heart disease; in Moscow. A slovenly, hard-drinking homosexual, less effective at undercover work than the fastidious Maclean, Burgess turned left at Cambridge, passed official secrets while in the foreign service both from London and Washington. He split with Maclean in exile, avoided Russians and defiantly sported his old school tie, but it was left to Maclean to eulogize him, as a band blared the Internationale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Sep. 13, 1963 | 9/13/1963 | See Source »

...Russian government mouthpiece, Izvestia, announced last week that British Journalist and longtime Foreign Office Staffer H.A.R. ("Kim") Philby, 51, the famed Third Man in the Burgess-Maclean spy case, had turned up in Moscow, where he will probably spend the rest of his wretched life. Philby vanished last January from Beirut, where he had been a correspondent for London's Economist and Observer. Presumably he had been sent to the Middle East as a British agent, but had actually been a double agent for the Russians as well...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Espionage: Philby's Flight | 8/9/1963 | See Source »

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