SAW NO END TO U.S. ATTACKS – NORMAN AIDE

By HAROLD GREER
Star Staff Correspondent

Cairo, April 4 – The Canadian embassy in Cairo said in a long distance telephone conversation today that Dr. Norman was in the best of health and good spirits prior to the renewed attack on him by Mr. Morris.

D. G. Gilmore, first secretary of the embassy, said Dr. Norman suffered severe melancholia as a result of the attack against him. Mr. Gilmore said the ambassador seemed to feel that there would be no end to these smears against his reputation although they were disposed of and denied by the Canadian government in 1951.

“He was a very sensitive man who took this sort of thing harder than perhaps most men would,” Mr. Gilmore said.

The Egyptian government and representatives of nearly all other countries in Cairo have expressed their regrets at the embassy, Mr. Gilmore said.

[…]

Source: Greer, Harold, "Saw No End to U.S. Attacks – Norman Aide," Toronto Daily Star, April 4, 1957

Return to parent page