BUSH FAMILY FAVORITE PETER MAX HITS THE ROAD..THE KGB SNOOPS...BILL COLBY EXPLAINS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-00418R000100150003-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 15, 2012
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
July 1, 1991
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP99-00418R000100150003-3.pdf76.93 KB
Body: 
STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/15: CIA-RDP99-00418R000100150003-3 N.waw.tlt nnt. U.S. Nom & World R.port 1~G.th1~1S fy~.e; n /3 Date ,~ i h- _1 11 f a boxing champ can't keep the pounds off, what hope is there for the rest of us? Sugar Ray Leonard wanted to lose his ..love handles.'' so he slipped into Sibley Hospital in May for a little liposuction, courtesy of a Montgomery County plastic sur- geon. Dr. Jorge Reisin. That's artist Peter Max rejoicing before a painting he completed recently on the front lawn of the White House. One of the First Family's favorite artists was in the Soviet Union last month to unveil a 25-year retrospective- including this canvas of Old Glo- ry-that drove the Soviets wild. On opening night the line stretched around the block outside the huge Central Exhibition Hall of the Hermitage museum. When the doors opened. police struggled to control a crowd eager to see Max's exuberant work. celebrat- ing such Western icons as the Bea- tles and the Statue of Liberty. The Max organization invited me over for the opening, which boasted some of the hoopla of a rock tour, complete with a crew from music-video channel VH-1. with former Herman's Hermits star Peter Noone as host. There were even groupies, of a fash- ion-wealthy collectors from Ja- pan and the United States invited by Max's American dealer. Scott Hanson. In Leningrad, maybe soon again to be St. Petersburg; the bad old days of the KGB aren't quite over, as I found out at my hotel on a barge. the Olympia. Once a floating dormitory for offshore oil workers, the barge was converted by the Swedish hotel chain Reso into a hotel, lux- urious by Soviet standards. After checking in, I took a four: hour walk around Leningrad and re- turned to find that my room had been thoroughly searched. Not missing were about $1.000 in cash, bottles of Scotch, and car- tons of Marlboros-brought as "gifts for natives." as National Geographic expense-account forms used to gay. Missing were a stack of Ameri- 3ush Family Favorite Peter Max Hits the Road The KGB Snoops ... Bill Colby Explains can magazines, a John Le Carte novel, my calendar. a guidebook. and two pieces of scrap paper on which were written the names of Soviets in Leningrad and Mos- cow whom friends had suggested I call. The disappearance of the last item convinced an Arne, ican dip- lomat and a Soviet journalist with whom I spoke that the internal- security boys had paid a visit. I was flattered thbt anyone cared. But I'd appreciate the re- turn of my daybook. Or at least the KGB could call to remind me of upcoming luncheon dates. Ito try, out the new nonstop from Dulles to Tokyo (it's boffo), and my fel- low travelers turned out to be for- mer CIA director William Colby and his wife, the former Ameri- can ambassador to Barbados. Sally Shelton. While two JAL sushi chefs la- bored in the front of the 747. I asked Colby why the Leningrad snoops hadn't taken my cash. "Probably because there were two of them," said Colby. He suggested I write the Soviet Em- bassy to request the return of my calendar. Colby had his own special memory of the Soviet Union. He first visited there last year. On a December night. as a light snow fell. Colby took a solitary walk in Moscow. He saw the bare food shelves of a department store and then headed toward Red Square. dramatically lit against the black sky. For 40 years these people have been our enemy. thought Colby. Ten years ago he couldn t have roamed Moscow A, he gazed at the city's imposing domes. the retired spy mast. r considered his walk a pcrnon,,i victory parade. The Colbys have been marrlcLi for nearly seven years. He , _I she's 47. His children tram ii, first marriage. Sally She!!,, , says. have not accepted hi, and marriage gracefully "There's a societal against second marriages. Shelton. "The second w i to i. i, a real wife. It goes hack to i.,1 tales-stepmothers are c When children are younger. thr. look at the second wife as an iu thority figure. When the% rc adults. they speak their mind Shelton says that relations be- tween her and her new husband's adult children have on occasion been less than civil. Which has led Shelton, an economic adviser to companies that do business in Latin America. to begin work on a book about second marriages that involve adult children. Shelton thinks it' II be a hot top- ic in an era when Americans are living longer than ever before. Most second marriages end in di- vorce. and Shelton sass the hig- gest problem is adult children L Pay. 1i Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/05/15: CIA-RDP99-00418R000100150003-3