(2 of 2)
Concluded the board: "This board is convinced that the employee has engaged in espionage and subversive activity against the U.S., that he was placed in a position in the Treasury Department of the U.S. by Communists and espionage agents for the purpose of obtaining his assistance and cooperation in their treacherous plans and objectives, and that he was and possibly still is an adherent to the Communist ideology."
At week's end William Henry Taylor was still a $12,000-a-year adviser to the I.M.F., with offices in Washington. He plans to fight the board's finding. Implementing the decision may be difficult: because the monetary fund is an international agency, the U.S. board's opinion can be only advisory.
*White died of a heart attack on Aug. 16, 1948. Glasser now lives in Great Neck, N.Y., has no occupation of record. Ullman and Silvermaster, who lived together in Washington, are partners in a New Jersey construction firm. Ullman has been brought into the courts and ordered to testify under a law that would grant him immunity from prosecution, thereby preventing him from using the Fifth Amendment. He is still fighting the constitutionality of the law. If Ullman is finally required to tell what he knows about the Silvermaster ring, the Government still hopes to prosecute its other members.
